Max Delvalle


Max Delvalle Levy-Maduro was a Panamanian politician who served as vice president from 1964 to 1968 and briefly served as acting president in 1967.
Under the Panamanian constitution, the holder of the office of "first vice president" became acting president at home while the President was out of the country. On April 8, 1967, President Marco Aurelio Robles Méndez departed Panama for a summit conference (at Punta del Este in Uruguay of the presidents of the western hemisphere's nations, and Delvalle was sworn in to govern the nation during the absence of Robles. From April 8 to April 15, 1967, Delvalle served as acting president of Panama. He said at the time that there were only two Jewish presidents in the world, the president of the State of Israel and him. Delvalle was described in the press as "the first Jewish president in the history of the Americas".
President Robles continued to represent Panama at the summit in Uruguay and met with U.S. President Lyndon Johnson on April 13 to discuss the Panama Canal treaty, before returning home. Delvalle then resumed his regular duties as first vice president.

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