Ludvia Yeseña Guamáni Vásquez is an Ecuadorian politician. She represents a constituency in the Andes and the Democratic Left party. Until 2022 she was a vice-president of the National Assembly.
Yeseña Guamaní | |
---|---|
Born | Ludvia Yeseña Guamáni Vásquez |
Nationality | Ecuador |
Occupation | politician |
Political party | Democratic Left |
Life
editShe was born in about 1987. Her school was called the Domingo Savio Salesian Educational Unit and it was in Cayambe. She studied Social Communication at the Politecnica Salesiana University in Quito.[1]
Her father Edwin Marcelo Guamaní and his brother, Reinado, were both local politicians. Her uncle was the mayor and her father became the councilor for the Cayambe Canton. Her father was a member of the Democratic Left and that became her party.[1]
She worked in state radio and then state TV for ten years. She became a TV presenter and she then worked at Ecuador's Ministry of Education and its Ministry of the Environment. Guamaní is keen on wild animals in her country.[1]
She was elected to the National Assembly in February 2021.[1] In October her fellow Democratic Left member Bella Jimenez was dismissed after an investigation found that she had been taking money in exchange for influence. Jiminez was a second vice-president and for some time there was a debate about whether Guamaní would be her replacement.[2]
Guamaní was voted to be the National Assembly's second vice president. She is her party's vice-president and she had to deal with disputes arising from a recent change in leadership. In 2022 there were five Democratic party members who were not voting with the party.[3] The five members were Johanna Moreira, Alejandro Jaramillo, Rocío Guanoluisa, Javier Santos and Lucía Placencia.[3] This has raised difficulty with the important Council of Legislative Administration who have had difficulty in obtaining a quorum.[4] Alejandro Jaramillo and then Johanna Moreira were expelled from the party.[5]
In June 2022 she was called to defend a charge of breach of duties. Jhajaira Urresta alleged that Guamani had interfered with the running of the Legislative Administration Council by putting forward a motion that the Constitutional Court needed to be consulted before Viviana Veloz's tax reform bill was approved. Guamani noted that it was her job to put forward motions.[6] A committee was formed consisting of Patricia Mendoza, Rocío Guanoluisa, Mireya Pazmiño, María José Plaza and Elina Narváez to consider the complaint. Guamani did nor recognise the authority of the committee and singled out Rocío Guanoluisa because she was no longer a supporter of the Democratic Left party.[7]
In July 2022 the position of vice-President of the assembly was vacant. There was a political stand-off as the parties could not agree. The Pachakutik party proposed Mireya Pazmiño and Mario Ruiz and the Democratic Left offered Jhoanna Moreira. Union for Hope aka UNES offered the names of Marcela Holguín, Sofia Espín and Esther Cuesta.[8]
References
edit- ^ a b c d "¿Quién es la asambleísta Yeseña Guamaní?". GK (in Spanish). 2021-10-17. Retrieved 2022-05-20.
- ^ "National Assembly has been without a second vice president for ten days due to lack of votes around the ID candidate - 247 News Agency". 247newsagency.com. Retrieved 2022-05-20.
- ^ a b Amaguaya, Karina (2022-05-05). "Yeseña Guamaní: los conflictos en la Izquierda Democrática". Teleamazonas (in Spanish). Retrieved 2022-05-20.
- ^ "El CAL se estanca en medio de una batalla política – Diario La Hora" (in Spanish). Retrieved 2022-05-20.
- ^ "Expulsan a Johana Moreira de la Izquierda Democrática". www.vistazo.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2022-05-20.
- ^ "Juzgamiento a la segunda vicepresidenta de la Asamblea Nacional entra a la recta final". El Universo (in Spanish). 2022-07-04. Retrieved 2022-07-10.
- ^ Pazan, Claudia (2022-06-10). "Lista la comisión para proceso de remoción de Yeseña Guamaní". El Comercio (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-06-30.
- ^ "Entre los bloques de la Asamblea que buscan las dos vicepresidencias aún no hay las condiciones para llegar a un acuerdo – Diario La Hora" (in Spanish). Retrieved 2022-08-06.