Claudia Sheinbaum, who will be Mexico’s first female leader in the nation’s more than 200 years of independence, captured the presidency by promising continuity. The 61-year-old former Mexico City mayor and lifelong leftist ran a disciplined campaign, capitalizing on her predecessor’s popularity, before emerging victorious in Sunday’s vote, according to an official quick count.
But with her victory now in hand, Mexicans will look to see how Claudia Sheinbaum, a very different personality from her mentor and current President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, will assert herself.
While she is close to López Obrador politically and shares many of his ideas about the government’s role in addressing inequality, she is viewed as less combative and more data-driven.
Claudia Sheinbaum’s background is in science. She has a Ph.D. in energy engineering.
Her brother is a physicist. In a 2023 interview with The Associated Press, Sheinbaum said, “I believe in science.”
Observers say that grounding showed itself in Sheinb. Aum’s actions as mayor during the COVID-19 pandemic, when her city of some 9 million people took a different approach from what López Obrador espoused at the national level. While the federal government was downplaying the importance of coronavirus testing, Mexico City expanded its testing regimen. Sheinbaum set limits on businesses’ hours and capacity when the virus was rapidly spreading, even though López Obrador wanted to avoid any measures that would hurt the economy.
And she publicly wore protective masks and urged social distancing while the president was still lunging into crowds. Mexico’s persistently high levels of violence will be one of her most immediate challenges.
lenges after she takes office on Oct. 1. On the campaign trail, she said little more than that she would expand the quasi-military National Guard created by López Obrador and continue his strategy of targeting social ills that make so many young Mexicans easy targets for cartel recruitment.
“Let it be clear, it doesn’t mean an iron fist, wars, or authoritarianism,” Sheinbaum said of her approach to tackling criminal gangs during her final campaign event. “We will promote a strategy of addressing the causes and continue moving toward zero impunity.” “For me, being from the left has to do with that, with guaranteeing the minimum rights to all residents,” Sheinbaum told the AP last year.
