Juan del Canto
Juan Rafael del Canto was a Chilean lawyer, public servant, and long-serving parliamentarian affiliated with the Liberal Democratic Party.
Biography
He was born in Cauquenes on 7 August 1883, the son of Luis Antonio del Canto del Campo and Regina Medán Lacroix. He studied at the Colegio de los Padres Franceses in Santiago and obtained his law degree on 19 May 1909, authoring a thesis on water legislation. He practiced law in Santiago and served as First Officer at the Ministry of Public Instruction, where he carried out several commissions, including a study on state-subsidized private schools.He married Amelia Benítez Poblete on 4 November 1933. After her death, he married her sister, Nicomedes de las Mercedes Benítez Poblete, at the Capuchins in Santiago on 25 September 1947. He had no children.
Del Canto played an active role in the Liberal Democratic Party: he served as president of the Santiago Liberal Democratic Center, presided over the First General Convention of Liberal Democratic Youth, acted as party general director, and authored key contributions on colonization and public lands at the 1922 Party Convention.
Beyond politics, he supported the development of physical culture in Chile. He was a member of the Santiago Football Association, Club Thunder, and Club Santiago National; director of the Chilean Football League; and a founder of the Boxing Federation. He also received various medals at international wine exhibitions, including the Sevilla exposition.
He died in Viña del Mar on 7 May 1960.
Political career
Del Canto was elected Deputy for Castro for the period 1912–1915, serving on the Liberal Democratic Parliamentary Committee. He sat on the Public Instruction Commission and on a special commission tasked with studying public services in Magallanes, producing several improvement proposals after visiting the territory.He was re-elected for 1915–1918, and again for the 1924–1927 term, which he did not complete due to the dissolution of Congress by the Junta de Gobierno on 11 September 1924.
He later served as Deputy for Ancud, Castro and Quinchao during the periods 1926–1930 and 1930–1934. His 1930–1934 term was interrupted on 6 June 1932 by the dissolution of Congress following the revolutionary movement of 4 June.
Del Canto was again elected for the periods 1933–1937, 1937–1941, and 1941–1945, achieving one of the longest continuous parliamentary careers of his time, representing repeatedly the Chiloé district.