Gerardo Sotelo del Giacco (born April 28, 1958) is a Uruguayan journalist, author and politician, serving as a National Representative in the 50th Legislature since 2025. A member of the Independent Party, he previously served as director of the National Television and president of the National Audiovisual Communication Service from 2020 to 2024.
Sotelo was born in Montevideo in 1958 and was raised in the Palermo neighborhood. His father was a graphic worker, and his mother was an officer at the State Insurance Bank. He is of Galician and Italian descent. He attended public schools and completed a technical baccalaureate at the Higher School of Social Communication and Graphic Design of the University of Labor of Uruguay.
Sotelo began his journalistic career in 1981, publishing articles in Noticias magazine and later in the weekly publications Opción and AquÃÂ, opposition periodicals during UruguayâÂÂs transition to democracy. In 1994, he entered television as a co-host of Channel 4's morning program Muy Buenos DÃÂas, alongside Ana Nahum. In 1997, he premiered Caleidoscopio on Channel 10 together with MarÃÂa Inés ObaldÃÂa; the show remained on the air for five years.
In 2019, Sotelo announced his affiliation with the Independent Party and entered political activity. In the general election held that year, he was the partyâÂÂs second substitute candidate for the Senate. In early 2020, he was proposed by the Independent Party as a candidate for Intendant of Montevideo under the Multicolor Coalition; however, he later withdrew his candidacy due to a lack of support from the other coalition parties. He was later selected as a substitute candidate for Laura Raffo, the coalitionâÂÂs candidate representing the Independent Party, a role from which he subsequently resigned.
On 22 April 2020, Sotelo was appointed director of National Television, and three days later director of the National Audiovisual Communication Service. He resigned from both positions in June 2024 in order to participate in the electoral campaign as a candidate for the Chamber of Representatives. In the general election, he was elected, becoming the only legislator from the Independent Party in the 50th Legislature.