Jaime Rodríguez Calderón

This name uses Spanish naming customs: the first or paternal family name is Rodríguez and the second or maternal family name is Calderón.
Jaime Heliodoro Rodríguez Calderón
Governor of Nuevo León
Assumed office
4 October 2015
Preceded by Rodrigo Medina de la Cruz
Personal details
Born (1957-12-28) December 28, 1957
Ejido Pablillo, Galeana, Nuevo León, Mexico
Political party Political independent; previously affiliated with the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI)
Religion Roman Catholicism

Jaime Heliodoro Rodríguez Calderón (born 28 December 1957 in Galeana, Nuevo León), sometimes referred to by his nickname El Bronco, is the Governor of the northern state of Nuevo León. He is the first independent candidate to have won a governorship in Mexico.[1] He served as mayor of García, Nuevo León (2009–2012) as a member of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), and was best known for his hard-line stance against organized crime. Rodríguez won the 2015 race for Governor as an independent candidate on June 7, 2015, winning half the votes of the election compared to his traditional party competitors, who split the remainder of the votes.[2] He will serve as governor until 2021.

Early life

Jaime Heliodoro Rodríguez Calderón was born on December 28, 1957, in Pablillo Ejido, a municipality of Galeana, Nuevo León. He was the fourth of ten children born to Lichita Calderon and Rodolfo Rodríguez.

Rodríguez attended primary school at Squadron 201 in Ejido Pablillo. He attended secondary school at Miguel Hidalgo in Galeana.

Rodríguez majored in Agricultural Engineering in the Autonomous University of Nuevo León and graduated in 1982. According to Jaime, this was made possible by Don Protacio Rodriguez, owner of Transportes Tamaulipas (now Grupo Senda). Don Protacio gave Rodríguez a card that allowed him to travel to Monterrey for his studies. Toward the end of his studies he performed a symbolic strike at the university, calling on governor Alfonso Martínez Domínguez to increase support for public transportation. After the strike, and with the support of the governor, he established a scholarship for poor students struggling to pay for their education.

Upon graduation, he joined the Institutional Revolutionary Party and worked for Governor Martinez Domínguez.

Career

Rodríguez was a member of the PRI for 33 years and served as a federal deputy in 1992, local MP in 1997, and Mayor of García.

During his term as mayor of García, Rodríguez was the target of violent attacks.[3] The 2013 El Bronco sin Miedo ('The Bronco Without Fear') recounted the attacks.[4]

In the 2015 election, Rodríguez ran against Ivonne Alvarez (PRI) and Felipe Cantu (PAN). He first expressed an interest in running as an independent candidate on 3 December 2014. By the second week of January his supporters collected 150,000 signatures, exceeding the 103,000 required to meet the 3% of the population minimum for independent candidates to get on the ballot. By February he had more than 334,000 signatures. Election authorities officially added his name on 2 March.

Televisa unfair defamation against his image

El Bronco receives, political bias, biased news coverage and unfair criticisms and defamation from Televisa, due to being the first independent governor without a political party. Also, unlike previous governors he doesn't spend money on bribing television news media to clean his image. In retaliation the Mexican television news unfairly mentioned him the least possible. in his words:"Hay 314 denuncias de carros robados y recuperamos 229, pero como no le pagamos a Televisa, Multimedios y TV Azteca, no lo sacan. Hemos logrado desintegrar bandas roba carros y roba traileres, y lo hemos hecho dicho en todas las ruedas de prensa, pero Televisa, Multimedios y TV Azteca no lo sacan." (There's 314 denouncements of stolen cars, we retrieved 229, but since we didn't bribe Televisa, Multimedios and TV Azteca they don't show it. We have disbanded a band of thieves of cars and trucks. We have said it on every press round, but Televisa, Multimedios and TV Azteca don't show it.) [5]

This was fully confirmed to be happening on Televisa in September 11, 2016, during a Live-Television broadcast of "Monterrey al Dia" where the Televisa news reporter, Karla Minaya, said: "hay que tratar de que el gobernador (Jaime Rodríguez Calderón), por cierto, entre lo menos posible" ("we have to try that the governor, for sure, is mentioned the least possible"). The Mexican newspaper El Universal published on social media a video of the event, which was covered by national news media although Televisa didn't mention the story and declined to comment.[6]

Political offices
Preceded by
Rodrigo Medina de la Cruz
Governor of Nuevo León
2015 – present
Succeeded by
Incumbent

References

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