Yeidckol Polevnsky

Yeidckol Polevnsky Gurwitz[1] (born 25 January 1958 in Mexico City as Citlali Ibáñez Camacho) is a Mexican politician. She was the General Secretary of the National Regeneration Movement between 2017 and 2020.

Yeidckol Polevnsky Gurwitz
President of the National Regeneration Movement
Assumed office
12 December 2017
Preceded byAndrés Manuel López Obrador
Secretary General of the National Regeneration Movement
Assumed office
20 November 2015
Preceded byBertha Luján Uranga
Senator of the Congress of the Union
for the State of Mexico
In office
1 September 2006  31 August 2012
Preceded byCarlos Madrazo Limón
Succeeded byAna Lilia Herrera Anzaldo
Personal details
Born
Citlali Ibáñez Camacho

(1958-01-25) 25 January 1958
Mexico City, Mexico
Political partyNational Regeneration Movement (2014–present)
Other political
affiliations
Democratic Revolution (?–2014)
Spouse(s)
Arnold Rodríguez
(
m. 1970; div. 1995)
Children2
Website

She was the Party of the Democratic Revolution's nominee for Governor of the State of Mexico in the 2005 election and served as a senator from the State of Mexico from 2006 to 2012.

Early life and name change

Daughter of Guillermina Camacho Amezcua and Colonel Cuitláhuac Ibáñez Treviño, she had a difficult childhood. First, the unstable Ibáñez-Camacho marriage ended in divorce when Yeidckol (then called Citlali) was still a very little girl, at a time when Mexican society viewed women separated from their husbands as immoral. Seeking protection from her ex-husband, Mrs. Camacho pretended to be a relative of Mexican President Manuel Ávila Camacho, an assertion that would later cause great problems for the family.

In 1970 the chaos of her family life reached its most extreme when Citlali, only 12 years old, became pregnant in very controversial circumstances for the time. She had to leave school. Wanting to protect her family from further social derision, her mother changed all of her children's names and adopted Yeidckol's newborn son as her own.

In a press conference on 2 March 2005, Polevnsky explained that her original name is Citlali Ibáñez Camacho, but that due to family conflicts, her mother decided to change it to "Yeidckol", which in Hebrew means "the call of God."[2] Polevnsky stated in another interview that her name was Polish.[3]

Professional career

She studied psychology at the Universidad Anáhuac in Mexico City. She has served various positions inside the Cámara Nacional de la Industria de la Transformación (CANACINTRA) (es), including a period in 2002 as first woman president.

Political career

In 2005 she was nominated by the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) as the candidate for governor for the 2005 State of Mexico election. She lost to PRI's Enrique Peña Nieto, who would later on become President of Mexico in 2012.

In the 2006 general election she supported the presidential campaign of Andrés Manuel López Obrador and was elected to the Senate, representing the State of Mexico.

In 2014, she resigned from the PRD and joined the National Regeneration Movement (MORENA) and ran as a mayoral candidate for Naucalpan, State of Mexico, for the 2015 elections.[4]

Following the loss during the 2015 elections, on 20 November 2015, she was elected as General Secretary of MORENA.[5] On 12 December 2017 she became President of MORENA once Andrés Manuel López Obrador left the post to become the party's candidate for the coalition "Juntos Haremos Historia."[6][7]

Controversy over conflict of interest

In November 2010, according to the Mexico City's El Universal newspaper, she was embroiled in a scandal after a controversial vote in the upper chamber which favored tobacco companies, since her daughter works for one of the largest. In the incident, Senator Polevnsky voted against the legislative reform to increase cigarette prices, and therefore in favor of tobacco companies. It was later revealed that her daughter—Shirley Camacho Almaguer—worked as manager of External Communications Mexico for British American Tobacco (BAT), a Mexican-British company responsible for the Mexican operations of the Kent, Camel, Dunhill Viceroy, Lucky Strike, Raleigh, Alas and Montana brands. She denied any wrongdoing, allegedly responding that her vote had nothing to do with her daughter's job. On the contrary, she said that having been leader of the Mexican National Chamber of Industry, she could understand the uncertainty experienced by industry. Polevnsky insisted on denying any conflict of interest. "Her work does not influence my work," referring to both her job and her daughter's.[8]

See also

  • 2005 México state election

References

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