Luis Cabrera Lobato

Luis Vicente Cabrera Lobato (17 July 1876 – 12 April 1954) was a Mexican lawyer, politician and writer.

After Madero's murder in the February 1913 coup d'état, Cabrera was a key civilian adviser to the Primer Jefe of the Constitutionalist Army, Venustiano Carranza.

[5] Cabrera was assistant teacher at the Tecomaluca school in Tlaxcala for a while, before he continued his studies and worked for the El Hijo del Ahuizote, his uncle's anti-Díaz publication.

In July 1909 he became a co-founded of the Anti-Re-electionist Party, started a critical campaign against the científico group of Positivist advisers of Porfirio Díaz.

[5] In 1912 he became director of the Escuela Nacional de Jurisprudencia (today Faculty of Law of the UNAM) and deputy to the Congress.

[citation needed] Following Madero's assassination in February 1913 during General Victoriano Huerta's coup d'état and then restoration of Porfirian policies, Cabrera joined the Constitutionalist faction headed by Venustiano Carranza.

The United States–Mexico Commission. Standing from left to right are: Stephen Bonsal , Attache of the State Department and Advisor to the American Commission; American Secretary of State Robert Lansing ; Eliseo Arredondo , the Mexican ambassador designate, and Leo Stanton Rowe , the Secretary to the American Commission. Sitting from left to right are John Mott of New York City ; Judge George Gray of Wilmington, Delaware ; Secretary of the Interior Franklin Knight Lane ; Luis Cabrera Lobato , chairman of the Mexican delegation and Secretary of the Treasury of Mexico, Alberto J. Pani , President of the National Railways of Mexico; and Ignacio Bonillas , Minister of Communications and Public Works.. The image was taken at the Biltmore Hotel in New York City on 9 September 1916.