Yulma Rocha Aguilar

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Yulma Rocha Aguilar
Born (1981-09-07) 7 September 1981 (age 42)
Guanajuato, Mexico
NationalityMexican
OccupationPolitician
Political partyInstitutional Revolutionary Party

Yulma Rocha Aguilar (born 7 September 1981) is a Mexican politician from the Institutional Revolutionary Party. She represents the ninth district of Guanajuato in the Chamber of Deputies for the LXIII Legislature of the Mexican Congress.[1]

Life and career[edit]

After receiving a degree in public administration from the Universidad de Guanajuato, Rocha broke into politics at a young age: from 2003 to 2006, she served on the city council of Irapuato,[1] and in 2003, she also served as a PRI national political councilor.[1] In 2006, she became a local deputy for the first time, serving a three-year term in the LX Legislature of the Congress of Guanajuato.[1]

Rocha was selected by the PRI as a proportional representation deputy to serve in the LXI Legislature of the Mexican Congress. Rocha served as secretary on the Science and Technology Commission and additionally sat on the Commission for the Strengthening of Federalism.[1] She also was one of just nine PRI deputies that did not vote down a constitutional reform that would have restricted abortions.[2] However, just two days into her term, Rocha asked to leave her seat and was replaced with Guillermo Raúl Ruiz de Teresa. Rocha, along with seven other deputies, became known as the "juanitas" [es] because all of their alternate deputies—who would replace them—were men, which represented a misuse of gender quotas whereby women would be elected and then replaced with men.[2][3] The result of the "juanitas" was that in 2012, the TEPJF required that all combinations of primary and alternate officials be of the same gender, in order to maintain gender quotas.[4] From 2010 to 2014, Rocha served as secretary general to the Guanajuato state PRI, and from 2012 to 2015, she served in the LXII Legislature of Guanajuato and presided over its Education Commission.[1]

When Rocha announced she would run to return to the Chamber of Deputies in the LXIII Legislature, she was criticized by Sixto Zetina, then the mayor of Irapuato, who told Rocha on Twitter that "you denigrated women because you knew that you would only be a deputy because of your gender, but you were obligated to leave your seat to a man".[3] Additionally, her departure from the Guanajuato state congress, undertaken in order to conduct her campaign to return to the Palacio Legislativo de San Lázaro, left a vacant seat, as the alternate deputy refused to take the oath of office and multiple attempts to contact her did not meet with success.[5] Voters ultimately sent Rocha back to San Lázaro, where she serves on the Constitutional Points, Public Education and Educational Services, Jurisdictional, and Transparency and Anticorruption Commissions.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "Perfil del legislador" (in Spanish). Legislative Information System. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  2. ^ a b Torres Ruiz, Gladis (20 January 2010). "Aprueban licencia de dos diputadas más en San Lázaro". Cimac Noticias (in Spanish). Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  3. ^ a b "YULMA ROCHA, LA DIPUTADA 'JUANITA' QUE ENCENDIÓ EL DEBATE EN EL CONGRESO". Expansión (in Spanish). 2 September 2015. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  4. ^ Notimex (7 June 2012). "TEPJF prohíbe a partidos práctica de "Juanitas"". El Universal (in Spanish). Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  5. ^ Álvarez, Xóchitl (5 May 2015). "Diputada sustituta se niega a legislar". El Universal (in Spanish). Retrieved 11 July 2016.