Ensenada Municipality
Municipio de Ensenada | |
---|---|
Municipality of Ensenada | |
Coordinates: 31°31′08″N 116°00′18″W / 31.519°N 116.005°W | |
Country | Mexico |
State | Baja California |
Municipal seat | Ensenada |
Largest city | Ensenada |
Municipality established | 29 December 1953[2] |
Government | |
• Municipal president | Claudia Agatón Muñiz (Morena) |
Area | |
• Total | 19,526.8 km2 (7,539.3 sq mi) |
Population (2020) | |
• Total | 443,807[1] |
Time zone | UTC−8 (Northwest (US Pacific)) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC−7 (Northwest) |
INEGI code | 001 |
Website | (in Spanish) Ayuntamiento de Ensenada |
Source: National Institute for Federalism and Municipal Development (Inafed) Former website inaccessible. It was substituted. National Institute for Federalism and Municipal Development (Inafed)[3] |
Ensenada is a municipality in the Mexican state of Baja California.[4] It is the fourth-largest municipality in the country, with a land area of 19,526.8 km2 (7,539.3 sq mi) in 2020,[5] making slightly smaller than the state of Hidalgo and larger than five other Mexican states.
Located offshore, Cedros Island and Guadalupe Island are part of the municipality, making Ensenada the westernmost municipality in Mexico and Latin America.
Incorporated on May 15, 1882 as the northern partido of the Baja California Territory, it became a municipality of the state of Baja California on December 29, 1953.[6]
The municipality shares borders with every other municipality in the state: Tijuana, Playas de Rosarito and Tecate to the north, Mexicali and San Felipe to the east and southeast and San Quintín to the south. Its municipal seat is Ensenada, a port lying near the northwest corner of the municipality.
Ensenada's current (as of 2020[update]) municipal president (Spanish: presidente municipal) is Armando Ayala Robles. A major port is planned to be built in Punta Colonet, a largely uninhabited area 80 km (50 mi) south of the city of Ensenada.
In February 2020, San Quintín separated from Ensenada and became Baja California's sixth municipality.[7] Prior to this, Ensenada was the country's largest municipality. In January 2022, Puertecitos separated from Ensenada to San Felipe and became Baja California's seventh municipality, further reducing the size of Ensenada Municipality.
The Ensenada municipality is administratively subdivided into 17 boroughs:
Year | Pop. | ±% |
---|---|---|
1990 | 259,979 | — |
2000 | 370,730 | +42.6% |
2010 | 466,814 | +25.9% |
2020 | 443,807 | −4.9% |
From INEGI's Decennial Census.[8] |
As of 2020, the municipality had a total population of 443,807 in 1,698 localities.[1]
Ensenada, the seat, has 330,652 residents, and the following are the largest urban communities:
Term | Municipal president | Political party | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Municipal presidents of Ensenada, Northern District of Baja California | |||
1888-1889 | Emilio Legaspy | Círculo Nacional Porfirista[9] | |
1889 | Ricardo P. Eaton | Círculo Nacional Porfirista | |
1889 | Juan F. Montenegro | Círculo Nacional Porfirista | Acting municipal president |
1889-1891 | Rodolfo F. Nieto | Círculo Nacional Porfirista | |
1891-1896 | Ismael Sánchez | Círculo Nacional Porfirista | |
1896-1897 | José María Obando | Círculo Nacional Porfirista | |
1897-1901 | Carlos A. Guijosa | Círculo Nacional Porfirista | |
1901 | Alejandro Guerrero y Porres | Círculo Nacional Porfirista | |
1901-1902 | Enrique Ferniza | Círculo Nacional Porfirista | Acting municipal president |
1902-1903 | Alejandro Guerrero y Porres | Círculo Nacional Porfirista | Resumed |
1903-1907 | Eulogio Romero | Círculo Nacional Porfirista | |
1907-1911 | Manuel Labastida Castro | Círculo Nacional Porfirista | |
Municipal presidents of Ensenada, Northern Territory of Baja California | |||
1911-1915 | David Zárate Zazueta | ||
1915-1916 | Eugenie G. Beraud | ||
1916-1920 | Antonio Ptacnik | ||
1920-1921 | Othón P. Blanco | ||
1921 | Ramón Moyron, Jr. | ||
1921-1922 | David Zárate Zazueta | ||
1922-1923 | Ramón Moyron, Jr. | ||
1923-1924 | Luis G. Beltrán | ||
1924 | Andrés E. Núñez | ||
1924-1925 | Percy Hussong | ||
1925-1926 | Gustavo Appel | ||
1926-1927 | Manuel Robles Linares | ||
Municipal Council | |||
1927-1928 | Daniel Goldbaum | First councilman | |
Delegation of Government | |||
1928 | Daniel Goldbaum | First delegate | |
1929-1932 | David Zárate Zazueta | PNR | Second delegate |
1932-1936 | Antonio Ortiz Ortega | PNR | Third delegate |
1936-1944 | Juan Julio Dunn Legaspy | PNR PRM |
Fourth delegate |
1944-1945 | Braulio Maldonado Sánchez | PRM | Fifth delegate |
Constitutionally elected municipal presidents | |||
01/12/1953-1956[10][11] | David Ojeda Ochoa | PRI | |
1956-31/10/1956 | Víctor Salazar | PRI | Acting municipal president |
01/11/1956-31/10/1959 | Santos B. Cota | PRI | |
01/11/1959-31/10/1962 | Elpidio Berlanga de León | PRI | |
01/11/1962-31/10/1965 | Adolfo Ramírez Méndez | PRI | |
01/11/1965-31/10/1968 | Jorge Olguín Hermida | PRI | |
01/11/1968-31/10/1971 | Guilebaldo Silva Cota | PRI | |
01/11/1971-31/10/1974 | Octavio Pérez Pazuengo | PRI | |
01/11/1974-31/10/1977 | Jorge Moreno Bonet | PRI | |
01/11/1977-31/10/1980 | Luis González Ruiz | PRI | |
01/11/1980-31/10/1983 | Raúl Ramírez Funcke | PRI | |
01/11/1983-31/10/1986 | David Ojeda Ochoa | Socialist Workers' Party, PST | First municipal president out of an opposition party |
01/11/1986-19/04/1989 | Ernesto Ruffo Appel | PAN | He applied for a temporary leave in order to run for the state governor office, which he got |
20/04/1989-31/10/1989 | Enrique Chapela Zapién | PAN | Acting municipal president |
01/11/1989-31/10/1992 | Jesús del Palacio Lafontaine | PAN | |
01/11/1992-31/10/1995[12] | Óscar Sánchez del Palacio | PAN | |
01/11/1995-31/10/1998 | Manuel Montenegro Espinoza | PRI | |
01/11/1998-2001 | Daniel Quintero Peña | PRI | He applied for a temporary leave in order to seek the state governor office, which he didn't get |
2001-31/10/2001 | Ricardo Arjona Goldbaum | PRI | Acting municipal president |
01/11/2001-31/10/2004 | Jorge Antonio Catalán Sosa | PAN PVEM |
Alliance for Baja California |
01/11/2004-31/10/2007 | César Mancillas Amador | PAN | |
01/11/2007-31/10/2010 | Pablo Alejo López Núñez | PAN Panal PES |
Alliance for Baja California |
01/11/2010-31/10/2013 | Enrique Pelayo Torres | PRI PVEM |
Coalition For a Responsible Government |
01/11/2013-31/10/2016 | Gilberto Hirata Chico | PRI PT PVEM PES |
Coalition Compromise for Baja California |
01/11/2016-30/09/2019 | Marco Antonio Novelo Osuna | PRI PT PVEM Panal |
Coalition PRI-PT-PVEM-Panal |
01/10/2019-30/09/2021[13] | Armando Ayala Robles | Morena | |
01/10/2021-30/09/2024[14] | He was reelected on 06/06/2021 | ||
01/10/2024- | Claudia Agatón Muñiz |