Search

The Online Encyclopedia and Dictionary

 
     
 

Encyclopedia

Dictionary

Quotes

 

Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de León


Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de León was President of Mexico from 1994 to 2000.

The last of the uninterrupted 70-year line of revolutionary Mexican presidents from the National Revolutionary Party to the Institutional Revolutionary Party, Zedillo is one of the technocrats, the Mexican term for a politician never elected by popular vote, but who instead advanced in bureacratic rank from administration to administration. Before his election, Zedillo had served as secretary for planning and the budget and, later, as secretary of public education under President Carlos Salinas. He was chosen to be the campaign chief of Luis Donaldo Colosio when the latter was appointed to be the PRI's presidential candidate in the 1994 elections. After Colosio's assassination, Zedillo was one of the few PRI members eligible under Mexican law to take his place, since he had not occupied public office for some time.

Colosio's murder was blamed by many on Salinas. Although the PRI's presidential candidates were always chosen by the current president, and thus Colosio had originally been Salinas' candidate, their political relationship had been affected by a famous speech during the campaign in which Colosio said that Mexico had many problems. After Colosio's murder, this speech was seen as the main cause of his break with Salinas. The choice of Zedillo was interpreted as Salinas's way of bypassing the strong Mexican political tradition of non-reelection and retaining real power, since Zedillo was not really a politician, but an economist (like Salinas), who clearly lacked Salinas's political talent and influence. It is unclear if Salinas had attempted to control Colosio, who was a far better candidate.

After winning the election in 1994 (in the cleanest contest in years), Zedillo was regarded by many as a puppet-president. But after the December Mistake, which, although blamed on Salinas, occurred during his administration, he governed with relative ease, relying on the PRI tradition of loyalty to the current president.

In 2000 Zedillo recognized the electoral victory of opposition candidate Vicente Fox before midnight on election day, paving the way for what seemed an unlikely change of power. For this reason some PRI members consider him a traitor, claiming that the election was too close to admit defeat so soon and that, in any event, the concession should have come from the PRI's candidate, Francisco Labastida, and not the incumbent president.

After leaving office, Zedillo has held many jobs as an economic consultant in many international companies and organizations. As president, he maintained a low profile, with little scandal or accusations of corruption, though his role in the December Mistake is still questioned – he is thought to be too good an economist to do so a poor a job of devaluating the peso.

His political motto was Bienestar para tu familia (Wellbeing for your Family), still the butt of jokes and irony because of the deep economic crisis caused by the December Mistake. His most lasting act of government was the creation of Progresa, a poverty-fighting program based on subsidizing the poorest families provided their children go to school, later eulogised by the next president, Vicente Fox, who nicknamed it Contigo (With You).

At one public meeting of the World Economic Forum he coined the term Globaliphobic to refer to globalization detractors. The term became widely used in Mexico, and was quickly countered by Globaliphiliac.

See also: History of Mexico, Mexico

The contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. How to see transparent copy