Politics News
Immigrant Activist Runs for
Mexican Congress
Frontera NorteSur
May 5, 2009
The swine flu might have closed Mexican schools and slowed the
nation’s economy to a near standstill, but it didn’t stop the
latest political campaign from getting off the ground.
Although campaign kick-off events mainly proceeded last weekend
without the usual bluster, candidates from Mexico’s different
political parties launched their bids for positions in the lower
house of the Mexican Congress. In July, Mexican voters will go
to the polls to elect new federal representatives.
Among
the better known candidates running for Congress is Elvira
Arellano, the deported activist from the
United States who came to
symbolize the face of the new immigrant movement. Taking refuge
in a Chicago church in August 2006, Arellano defied
a deportation order and US immigration authorities for one year
in an unsuccessful attempt to remain with her young son. In
August 2007, she was arrested and sent back to
Mexico
after appearing at an immigrant rights rally in Los Angeles.
Almost two years later,
Arellano is on the campaign trail in Tijuana, Baja California,
where she is the candidate for Congressional District #4 on the
ticket of the center-left Party of the Democratic Revolution
(PRD).
Keeping true to her word to keep the migrant issue
alive in the public eye, the energetic activist is stressing
immigrant rights issues in Mexico’s 2009
political campaign. In comments last weekend, Arellano said she
is especially concerned about the fate of women migrants who
pass through Mexico on their way to the US, a journey
that is often fraught with sexual assaults and other abuses.
“I am going to seek laws in Congress that protect women, and
also that protect undocumented Central Americans who are treated
like criminals in Mexico,”
Arellano said.
Noting
Tijuana’s character as a city of
migrants, Arellano said she expected her message to receive a
positive response from voters.
Arellano’s election run is
the latest instance of a one-time Mexican migrant jumping into
the political ring south of the border. Individuals like
Arellano, who have experiences with laws, governments and civil
societies on both sides of the border, are gradually making
their mark on Mexican politics.
Perhaps the best-known
example of a migrant-turned-politician prior to Arellano is the
late Andres Tomato King” Bermudez, who made good in
California before returning to the state of Zacatecas and taking
a stab at becoming mayor of the town of Jerez.
Initially
denied a victory as a PRD candidate, Bermudez subsequently won
the top job in Jerez
as the representative for the center-right National Action Party
in 2004. The flamboyant politician went on to win a
Congressional seat for the same political party in 2006,
becoming one of current President Felipe Calderon’s most
virulent defenders in the
post-election conflict that
surrounded the contested presidential election three years ago.
Bermudez died of cancer earlier this year while still serving as
a federal legislator.
_______________________________________________________
Sources: La Jornada, May 4, 2009. El Universal, May 3, 2009.
Article by Julieta Martinez. Lapolaka.com, May 3. 2009.
Los Angeles Times, August 21, 2007, and
February 8, 2009. Articles by Teresa Watanabe and Sam Quinones.
Msnbc.com/Associated Press, August 20, 2007.
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NorteSur (FNS): on-line, U.S.-Mexico border news Center
for Latin American and Border Studies New Mexico State
University Las Cruces, New Mexico
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