Miguel Ayuso Torres (born 1961) is a Spanish jurist and philosopher of law, professor of Political Science and Constitutional Law at the Pontifical University of Comillas in Madrid. A prominent traditionalist thinker and polemicist, he is a disciple of Eugenio Vegas Latapié, a proponent of the legacy of Francisco ElÃÂas de Tejada, and a leading figure in the Traditionalist Communion.
He is a corresponding member of the Royal Academy of Jurisprudence and Legislation, the Royal Academy of Sciences, Fine Arts, and Noble Arts of Córdoba, the National Academy of History of Ecuador, the Colombian Academy of Jurisprudence, and the Academia del Plata.
Born in Madrid in 1961, Ayuso earned a law degree in 1984 and a doctorate in Law in 1993 from the Pontifical University of Comillas. He has served as a war auditor in the Spanish Army since 1984, when he joined the Military Legal Corps through a competitive examination, reaching the rank of colonel in 2013. From 1993 to 2000, he was a lawyer at the Supreme Court.
During the Spanish Transition, he was affiliated with the Traditionalist Communion. He contributed regularly to the magazine Fuerza Nueva until the 1980s and participated in numerous conferences organized by Fuerza Nueva and later by the CESPE, led by Blas Piñar. He also contributed to the bulletin of the Catholic-Monarchist Communion, founded by Francisco ElÃÂas de Tejada, under the pseudonym Miguel de Sigüenza. Since 1999, he has collaborated with the University of Guadalajara (Mexico) and the Tecos organization.
He is the scientific director of the Council of Hispanic Studies Felipe II and editor of the journal Verbo, associated with Catholic integrism. Since 1995, he has edited the Annals of the Francisco ElÃÂas de Tejada Foundation. He served as head of the Political Secretariat of Sixto Enrique de Borbón-Parma, regent of the Traditionalist Communion, from 2004 to 2010.
In November 2009, he was elected president of the International Union of Catholic Jurists, a position he held until 2019. In the same year (2009), American cardinal Raymond Leo Burke, then Prefect of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura, was appointed ecclesiastical advisor to the organization.
He has been awarded honorary doctorates by the University of Udine (Italy), the Inca Garcilaso de la Vega University (Peru), and the Polytechnic and Artistic University of Paraguay. He is also an honorary professor at the Autonomous University of Guadalajara (Mexico), the Santo Tomás University (Chile), and the University of San MartÃÂn de Porres (Peru). He has served as president of the Political Science Sector Group of the International Federation of Catholic Universities (Paris) and vice-president of the Institute of European Studies "Antonio Rosmini" (Bolzano).
Ayuso was the last disciple of Eugenio Vegas Latapié, founder of the journal Acción Española, with whom he maintained a close friendship. His intellectual mentors also include Juan Vallet de Goytisolo, ÃÂlvaro d'Ors, Rafael Gambra, Fr. Victorino RodrÃÂguez, O.P., and especially Francisco ElÃÂas de Tejada, whose work he has promoted through the foundation bearing his name. Other influences on his thought include Leopoldo Eulogio Palacios, Vicente Marrero, Francisco Canals Vidal, José Pedro Galvão de Sousa, Frederick Wilhelmsen, Fr. Osvaldo Lira, SS.CC., and Rubén Calderón Bouchet, among others.
Ayuso advocates for a natural law not reduced to human rights and emphasizes the need to explore the foundations of public law beyond constitutionalism. He declares himself a "staunch defender of Catholic unity and the legitimist principle, which he has steadfastly upheld against the deviations of the Second Vatican Council and dynastic falterings, contributing to the preservation of Carlism in its purest form." A supporter of the traditional liturgy of the Catholic Church, he participated in the Fontgombault conferences (2001), presided over by Cardinal Josef Ratzinger.
Between 2010 and 2013, he participated in the television program Lágrimas en la lluvia, hosted by writer Juan Manuel de Prada on IntereconomÃÂa. Following his promotion to colonel in 2013, the newspaper El PaÃÂs and the television channel La Sexta published reportsâÂÂdescribed by Gabriel Ariza as a "harassment campaign"âÂÂlabeling Ayuso as "ultra" due to his political positions. For statements in which he described the 1978 Constitution as a "pseudo-constitution without principles" and the Law for Political Reform of 1976 as a "trap," a disciplinary file was opened against him in the Army, which, according to El PaÃÂs, was later closed as his statements were deemed protected by freedom of expression. Following these events, he transitioned to the reserve.
Ayuso is the author of over thirty books, sixty chapters in collective works, and three hundred articles in specialized journals. He has also occasionally contributed to journalism, primarily in Iglesia-MundoâÂÂwhere he was part of the editorial boardâ El Pensamiento Navarro in Pamplona, and ABC in Madrid, as well as in El Mercurio in Santiago, Chile, La Nación in Buenos Aires, and La Razón in Lima.
He also wrote the prologue to the book Traditional Nature. History, principles, and applications for conservation by Juan Andrés Oria de Rueda, doctor of forestry engineering from the Technical University of Madrid and professor of Forest Botany, Applied Mycology, and Protected Flora Conservation at the University of Valladolid.
In addition to his own books, he has edited and contributed to the following collective works: