Verónika Mendoza

This article is about the Peruvian politician. For the El Salvadoran judoka athlete, see Verónica Mendoza.
This name uses Spanish naming customs: the first or paternal family name is Mendoza and the second or maternal family name is Frisch.
Verónika Mendoza
Member of Congress
For Cusco
In office
26 July 2011  26 July 2016
Constituency Cusco
Personal details
Born (1980-12-09) 9 December 1980
San Sebastián, Peru
Political party Nationalist Party (2008–2012)
Broad Front (2012–present)
Other political
affiliations
Peru Wins (2010–2012)
Alma mater Paris Diderot University
New Sorbonne University
National University of Distance
Education
Website Official website

Verónika Fanny Mendoza Frisch (born 9 December 1980), popularly known as Vero Mendoza, is a Peruvian psychologist, educator, and politician. She was a Member of Congress representing the Cusco region from July 2011 until July 2016.[1] She was the candidate of the Broad Front in the 2016 presidential election.

Early life, education, career

Verónika Mendoza was born on 9 December 1980 in the San Sebastián district of Cusco Province, in Peru’s southern Andean highlands. She is the daughter of Marcelino Mendoza and Gabrielle Marie Frisch D'Adhemar, a French citizen. Owing to her mother’s nationality, Mendoza holds a dual, both Peruvian and French, nationality.[2]

She studied at the Virgen del Carmen school in the city of Cusco and the Université Paris Diderot, in Paris, France, from which she graduated with a degree in Psychology in 2003.[1] Subsequently, she received a Master’s Degree in Social Sciences from the New Sorbonne University in 2006, and then a Master’s Degree in Education, with an emphasis on Spanish language, from Madrid’s Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia, in 2009.[1] Mendoza also speaks Quechua, an indigenous and official language of Peru.[3]

Mendoza worked as a Spanish-language instructor at the Centre Acadomia Prépa Paris. Later, she served as an instructor at the Asociación Pukllasunchis in Cusco, and as a professor at the Universidad Nacional del Altiplano in Puno.[1]

Political work

While in Europe, Mendoza worked as coordinator for support committees for the Peruvian Nationalist Party. In Peru, she was appointed the party youth’s press secretary in 2009, and as spokesperson for the party’s women’s commission the following year.

In the 2011 Peruvian general elections she ran for Congress, in representation of Cusco, on the Gana Perú coalition’s ticket. She was elected to the office with 47,088 votes. Her term expired in July of 2016.

In 2011, she was named Vice President of the Peruvian Congress’ Committee for Culture and Cultural Heritage. She is also a member of the Congressional Commission on Andean, Amazonian, and Afro-Peruvian Peoples, the Environment, and Ecology. Mendoza is a member of the Campaign in Defense of Water and Territory.

She has served the head of the Cusco Congressional delegation.[4] She resigned from the Gana Perú Congressional delegation on 4 June 2012, following violent repression of protesters and strikers in Espinar Province. Shortly thereafter, she joined the Popular ActionBroad Front parliamentary group.

Presidential Candidacy

After winning the party’s primary elections in October 2015, Mendoza became the Broad Front's (Frente Amplio) candidate in the 2016 presidential election. She finished third in that contest, with 2.8 million (18.8%) valid votes cast in her favor.[5]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Declaración Jurada de Vida del Candidato, curriculum vitae presented to the Peruvian national electoral authority, 2016 (accessed 19 March 2016).
  2. "Verónika Mendoza: 'De ninguna manera renunciaré a mi pasaporte francés'" ("Veronika Mendoza: 'In no way I give up my French passport'"), Peru 21, 13 October 2015
  3. Dosek, Tomas; Paredes, Maritza (3 June 2016). "Peru might elect an authoritarian president. These four maps tell you why.". The Washington Post. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
  4. "Verónika Fanny Mendoza Frisch", at the Peruvian Congress web portal
  5. Peru, Oficina Nacional de Procesos Electorales (ONPE), Presentaciòn de Resultados, Elecciones Generales 2016, uploaded 17 April 2016 (Accessed 17 April 2016)
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