Vice President of Honduras


The vice presidents of Honduras, officially the Designates to the Presidency, is the second highest political position in Honduras. According to the current constitution, the president and vice-presidents are elected in the same ticket. From 1957 to 2006 and from 2010 onwards there are positions of first, second, and third vice-president commonly known as the presidential designates.
Only during the Zelaya administration the vice-presidential position was held by one person, since the Congress reformed the Constitution in 2008 for that the vice-presidential charge would be held again by three persons. The position of vice president commissioner was created by former President Manuel Zelaya after Vice President Elvin Santos resigned in late 2008.

Functions and duties

The only constitutional duty of the vice presidents involves performing the functions of the president in their absence, usually due to incapacitation. If the absence is considered to be permanent, then one of the three vicepresidents, selected by the National Congress, will fulfill the functions of the president until the end of the term. If all the vicepresidents are absent, the president of the National Congress takes over as acting president, and if the president of the National Congress is also absent then the president of the Supreme Court will become acting president until the end of the term.
Vice presidents are eligible to be impeached by the National Congress for poor performance or misconduct. Vice presidents are also not allowed to remain outside the country for more than 15 days without the permission of the National Congress.

Requirements and restrictions

The requirements to be a vice president are the same as that of the president. A candidate must be Honduran by birth, be over the age of 30, have full civic rights, and may not be an active member of the leadership of any established religion.
Vice presidents may not be elected president while serving in the role, or within six months after the end of their term or resignation. Vice presidents can also not be elected as a deputy of the National Congress while serving in office.

History

The following is a history of officeholders:

1839–1954

1957–1972 (Military Era)

Constitutional vice presidents (since 1982)

Presidential designates (1982–2006)

Vice-president and presidential commissioner (2006–2010)

Before the 2005 elections, the Honduran Congress reformed the Constitution for that the charge of vice-president may be held by only one person.
TermPresidentVice presidentNotes
2006–2009Manuel ZelayaElvin Santos
Unoccupied
Arístides Mejía
Elvin Santos resigned to pursue the presidency.
Arístides Mejía didn't fully occupy the charge; he was a presidential commissioner, not a vice-president, since he was appointed by President Zelaya and not popularly elected; this equates to being a minister without portfolio. He was deposed on 28 June 2009.
2009–2010Roberto MichelettiUnoccupied Acting President Roberto Micheletti did not appoint any presidential commissioner while he was occupying the Honduran presidency.

Presidential designates (2010–present)

In 2008, before the Honduran primary elections, the three posts of vice-presidents were restored by order of the Supreme Court which deemed their replacement with a single vice-president unconstitutional.
TermPresidentFirst presidential designateSecond presidential designateThird presidential designateNotes
2010–2014Porfirio Lobo SosaMaría Antonieta Guillén VásquezSamuel Armando Reyes RendonVictor Hugo Barnica
2014–2018Juan Orlando HernándezRicardo Antonio Alvarez AriasAva Rossana Guevara PintoLorena Enriqueta Herrera
2018–2022Juan Orlando HernándezRicardo Antonio Alvarez AriasOlga Margarita Alvarado RodríguezMaría Antonia Rivera Rosales
2022–2026Xiomara CastroSalvador NasrallaDoris GutiérrezRenato FlorentinoNasralla left office in 2024
2026–2030Nasry AsfuraMaría Antonieta MejíaCarlos Flores GuifarroDiana HerreraSworn in on 27 January 2026