Background
Clouthier was born into the wealthy Clouthier family of Culiacán, Sinaloa.
Clouthier was born into the wealthy Clouthier family of Culiacán, Sinaloa.
He graduated from the Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education in 1957 as an agricultural engineer and co-founded a Catholic Family Movement (Movimiento Familiar Cristiano) with his wife Leticia Carrillo, with whom he had 10 children.
His staunch opposition to the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party and his sudden death in a car crash a year after the 1988 presidential elections (where he was the Personal Area Networks nominee) transformed him into a somewhat iconic figure for Mexicans. His leadership traits were formed back in the days when he attended Brown Military Academy in the United States. After that, he presided the Students Association while in college in Monterrey, Mexico, and when he graduated and began working, he spearheaded several business initiatives in his hometown Culiacán that included among others the well being of his workers and the families of them.
After chairing several business chambers both locally and nationally, he joined the National Action Party and ran an unsuccessful bid for the Sinaloa governorship in 1986.
Two years later he ran for president but came third in the official results after Carlos Salinas de Gortari of the long ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party (Institutional Revolutionary Party) and Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas Solórzano of the National Democratic Front (nowadays Party of the Democratic Revolution). He is credited in the greater part of bringing down the power of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (Institutional Revolutionary Party), after decades of being in power.
Clouthier died in a controversial car accident while in the Culiacán, Sinaloa - Mazatlán, Sinaloa highway. He was honored with a life-size statue in Los Pinos and several streets and plazas across the country.