海角大神

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Mexican machismo meets its match: Political women

Belying its macho image, Mexico is a regional leader in gender parity in politics, and the Supreme Court just decriminalized abortion.

By Whitney Eulich, Special correspondent
Mexico City

As Mexicans prepare for Independence Day festivities this week, including the traditional midnight grito, or shout, aspiring nurse Flora Espinosa says this year she鈥檒l be screaming in celebration of Mexican women.

That鈥檚 because in the span of a few hours on Sept. 6, many like Ms. Espinosa felt a shift in women鈥檚 standing. The Supreme Court decriminalized abortion, expanding reproductive rights, and the ruling party chose a woman as its presidential candidate, matching the opposition, meaning Mexico is almost guaranteed to have its first聽辫谤别蝉颈诲别苍迟补听next year.

鈥淚t gives me butterflies,鈥 says Ms. Espinosa, sipping coffee through a straw on her morning commute. 鈥淚鈥檓 not used to this; I鈥檓 actually feeling hopeful for women.鈥

Mexico may be a byword for machismo聽and have sky-high rates of femicide, but in recent years the country has also led the way in ensuring gender parity in politics. Women hold half of all congressional seats and Cabinet positions. And social movements, such as the mothers of children who have disappeared amid historic levels of violence, have become important political players, increasingly well organized and hard to sideline.

A woman president doesn鈥檛 guarantee a political agenda focused on women鈥檚 rights, cautions Esperanza Palma, a political scientist at the Universidad Aut贸noma Metropolitana-Azcapotzalco, and it will take time to ensure that doctors respect the Supreme Court ruling. But these recent moves are reasons for hope, she says.

鈥淭his is Mexican women鈥檚 moment,鈥 she says, pointing to the years of feminist-led organization and persistence that laid the groundwork for last week鈥檚 developments. 鈥淭hese are historic achievements, and we can feel optimistic.鈥

A more just society?

For decades, Latin America has been known for some of the most restrictive abortion policies in the world. But in recent years, countries such as Argentina and Colombia 鈥 and now Mexico 鈥 have begun dismantling restrictions on reproductive rights.

鈥淭his is a request from civil society that鈥檚 getting louder. Courts are listening. Governments are trying to listen,鈥 says Alejandra Coll, advocacy adviser for the Center for Reproductive Rights in Colombia.聽

Mexico鈥檚 Supreme Court ruling did not instantaneously do away with criminal penalties for abortion, which are still in effect in 20 of 32 states. But for those who use national health care services, regardless of where they live, the decision guarantees them legal access to an abortion, and doctors nationwide no longer face legal consequences for carrying out an abortion. The ruling is expected to serve as an impetus for more states to adopt the federal norm.

鈥淲e are聽moving towards a more just society, in which the rights of all are respected,鈥 Sen. Olga S谩nchez Cordero, a former Supreme Court justice, told the national newspaper Milenio last week.

Dr. Palma attributes the recent expansions of reproductive rights to a broader appreciation of gender perspective. 鈥淚ncorporating an understanding of international mandates, and considering human rights and women鈥檚 rights in how decisions are made 鈥 it鈥檚 a reflection of a new generation of decision-makers,鈥 she says.

Not all women are so enthusiastic.

鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 call abortion a win for Mexican women,鈥 says Magdalena Valero, selling聽pastries and coffee from a folding table outside a metro station one recent morning. 鈥淢exico鈥檚 problems like organized crime or violence against women, they all come down to society forgetting family values. That should be the focus for making Mexico a better place for women or for anyone,鈥 she says.

But, Ms. Valero acknowledges, her two teenage grandchildren disagree. 鈥淭hey tell me it is progress,鈥 she says. 鈥淥nly God knows.鈥

Coming up in 鈥24 - 鈥淪e帽ora聽Presidenta鈥

On the same day as the court鈥檚 ruling last week, Claudia Sheinbaum, a former mayor of Mexico City, was declared the ruling Morena party鈥檚 candidate in the 2024 presidential elections. Earlier, the Broad Front for Mexico, a coalition of leading opposition parties, had tapped Indigenous senator and businesswoman X贸chitl G谩lvez as its candidate.

Though Mexican women voted for the first time only in 1958, Mexico is now set to elect its first female president before the United States does.

Electoral gender quotas were first introduced in the 1990s, as Mexico emerged from decades of single-party rule, but political parties found ways to work around a requirement that 30% of candidates be women. Civil society groups, such as Mujeres en Plural, helped make parity a reality, taking their complaints to federal court.

Their dedication helped lead to constitutional changes, including the Political-Electoral Reform in 2014 and a 2019 reform that introduced the concept of聽鈥減arity in everything.鈥澛 That demands gender parity in all government positions, at all levels, where public decisions are made.

The proportion of women in politics climbed from聽15% in 1994聽to 50% in 2021.

Today women serve as president of the national electoral commission, head of the Supreme Court, presidents of the Senate and Congress, and head of the Bank of Mexico, among other high-profile positions.

鈥淲e鈥檝e been focused for so long on the quantitative, but now that we have reached parity, there鈥檚 more focus on the qualitative,鈥 says Marisol V谩zquez, a member of Mujeres en Plural, a network of politicians, academics, journalists, artists, activists, and professionals working for the political empowerment of women.

鈥淪ure, you鈥檙e a woman and you鈥檙e on the ballot,鈥 she says, 鈥渂ut what鈥檚 your agenda? How do your plans affect women? There are two women candidates for president this year, but it鈥檚 because they were the best candidates for each party.鈥

Both were selected through polls of party members, points out Dr. Palma. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 to say there seems to be a change in public perceptions around what it means to have a female candidate. It says women have the power, the presence in political parties, and can win over the public.鈥

But victories for women in politics have not translated directly to other spheres. Mexican women are underrepresented at all levels in the private sector, according to a聽2022 report聽by the consulting firm McKinsey, and their participation in the labor market is among the lowest in Latin America. Femicides are a distressing reality, with an estimated 10 women and girls killed in Mexico every day.

Despite her optimism, Dr. Palma is not running any victory laps yet. 鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 want to build up my expectations too high,鈥 she says. 鈥淲omen, like men, have party ties and limitations. They have to respond to other interests, and they will inherit the complex problems of the country鈥 like overwhelming organized crime, she points out.

鈥淧oliticians are full of surprises,鈥 she warns. 鈥淪ometimes the triumphs are not long term. We could see setbacks.鈥