[2] Simultaneously with his college education, Quesada served in a variety of positions within the Peruvian Aprista Party's Regional Committee.
[2] Simultaneously with his college education, Quesada served in a variety of positions within the Peruvian Aprista Party's Regional Committee.
During his tenure, he was subject to controversy amidst irregularities in his management of the government agency, being accused of allowing a property in southern Lima to be sold for US$1750.
[citation needed] At the 2016 general election, he was slated to run for a seat in the Andean Parliament with the Popular Alliance list.
[6][7][8] Quesada served as Institutional Secretary General until the 2017 convention elected his successor, three-term congressman Elías Rodríguez.