Licinio de la Fuente

Licinio de la Fuente was born on 7 August 1923 in Noez, a small village of the province of Toledo, as the son to a staunchly Conservative family of farmers.

[2] National Delegate of the Instituto Nacional de Previsión from 1960 to 1963, he briefly resumed his activities as State Lawyer, this time at the Supreme Court, between 1963 and 1965.

He handed in his resignation as Minister of Labor in February 1975 after the refusal of the Government of Arias to pass a new decree for collective conflicts that intended to recognise the right of strike.

[5] It was together with the Spanish People's Union (UDPE) the component party that provided AP with some demands of "social justice" linked to the joseantonian falangist tradition.

[6] De la Fuente stood as AP candidate to the Congress of Deputies in the electoral list in Toledo vis-à-vis the June 1977 general election.