Revilla was born in Salceda, a small town of the municipality of Polaciones, in 1943, when the province was called Santander. Revilla studied in the University of the Basque Country, where he graduated in Economic and Business Sciences and in banking and stock exchange. Between 1974 and 1982 he was the director of the Banco Atlántico in the City of Torrelavega. Likewise, he was professor of Economic Structure in the School of Business Management of Santander before joining the University of Cantabria, where he served as Associated Professor of Economic Policy and Public Finances until 1995. Revilla has three daughters, two of them from his first marriage and the youngest from his second marriage with Aurora Díaz Abella.
Political career
In 1971 he was the Delegate of the Spanish Syndical Organization in Torrelavega. In 1976, he was a founder of the Association in Defense of the Interests of Cantabria, a pioneer organization in the defense of the autonomy of Cantabria, and later of the Regionalist Party of Cantabria, founded in 1978. In the fourth Regional Congress, on 20 March 1988, Miguel Ángel Revilla was elected for the first time as Secretary-General, a position that he has occupied uninterruptedly since then, with the ratification of the successive congresses. He has served as Vice President and the Ministry of Public Works in the Government of Cantabria from 1995 to 2003 in two consecutive terms in a coalition government with the People's Party. In the 2003 regional elections his party obtained the highest vote increase: 60 percent more than in the previous elections. On 27 June 2003, despite his party being the third most voted, Miguel Ángel Revilla, after a coalition with Spanish Socialist Workers' Party, was elected as the 7th President of Cantabria. In the 2007 regional elections, PRC rose to second place, with a result that again gave them enough seats to form a coalition with the PSOE, being re-elected in June that year as president. Revilla and his party did not ran for the 2008 general election, although he publicly showed support to José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero. According to the Centre for Sociological Research, in 2010 he was the most valorated regional leader. In the 2011 regional elections, PRC was also the second party, but the People's Party obtained an absolute majority and Revilla served as Leader of the Opposition from 2011 to 2015. In the 2015 regional elections, PP lost the absolute majority and PRC remained the second party; Revilla was elected president again with the support of PSOE to serve for a third term. He ran for re-election in the 2019 regional elections, winning for the first time the elections and, with an agreement with the Socialist Party, Revilla was re-elected President for a fourth term.
Television celebrity
Thanks to his personality, Revilla has become a national TV celebrity. He started as a guest collaborator in the Buenafuente late night commenting on the current situation in the country from 2007 to 2009. From 2010 to 2011 he was a guest in the TV programsEl Programa de Ana Rosa and La Noria. The money obtained from such collaborations was donated entirely to the Economic Kitchen of Santander. Since 2013 he is a collaborator of the programLa Sexta Noche and he joined the TV program Las Mañanas de Cuatro as a political commentator. He has also collaborated with the Abre los ojos y mira program. Other programs he has collaborated withs are Todo va bien, Viajando con Chester or Hable con ellas. In November 2014, he hosted his own program: Este país merece la pena. In 2016, he collaborated in the program Dos días y una noche. He has participated as a guest in programs such as Mi casa es la tuya and El Hormiguero.
Books
Apart from its political and television career, Revilla is also a writer. His books are mainly focused on politics, although some are about economy or his personal experiences.