Isidro Leyva Leyva

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Isidro Leyva Leyva
Member of the Congress of Sonora
Plurinominal
In office
1985–1988
Personal details
Born1952 or 1953 (age 70–71)[1]
CitizenshipMexican
Political partyPRT
Alma materUniversidad de Sonora (LLB)

Isidro Leyva Leyva (born 1952/1953) is a Mexican politician and trade unionist. He served in the LI Legislature of the Congress of Sonora from 1985 to 1988 as a member of the now-defunct Workers' Revolutionary Party (PRT). He was later the director of the National Cattle Producers' Union from 2005 to 2021.

Career[edit]

A native of Huásabas, Sonora, Leyva studied law at the Universidad de Sonora and began his political activism as a student protester in the 1970s.[1][2] He joined the Workers' Revolutionary Party (PRT), a Trotskyist party with origins in the 1968 student protests, and got heavily involved in Sonoran farmers' and peasants' movements after his graduation.[1][2]

Leyva went on a ten-day tour of the Southwestern United States in the weeks leading up to the 1982 Mexican general election, which was the first national election contested by the PRT.[1] He visited California, New Mexico, Arizona, and Texas in an effort to strengthen ties between labor movements on both sides of the border.[1] He also promoted the PRT as a Socialist alternative for the working class and expressed his support for the PRT presidential nominee, Rosario Ibarra.[1]

Leyva served as a local deputy in the LI Legislature of the Congress of Sonora from 1985 to 1988 via proportional representation, becoming the first and only member of the PRT to serve in the body.[2][3] The PRT contested its final national election in 1991, after which it lost its registration as a national party. In 2006, Leyva was a Chamber of Deputies pre-candidate for the Coalition for the Good of All, which was created by the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD), Convergence, and the Labor Party (PT).[4]

A longtime supporter of workers' rights, Leyva was at the forefront of organizations such as the Frente Campesino Independiente Revolucionario and the Unión General Obrero, Campesina y Popular.[2] Additionally, he was a founding member of the Unión Nacional de Productores de Ganado (UNPG; National Cattle Producers' Union), which he directed at the Sonora level until 2004.[2] In August 2005, he took over as national director of the UNPG.[2] He held this role until late 2021, when he was named the general director of ranching development by the SAGARHPA (Secretariat of Agriculture, Ranching, Hydraulic Resources, Fishing, and Aquaculture) Subsecretariat of Ranching.[5][6]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f Yáñez, Aníbal (12 July 1982). "La alternativa obrera en las elecciones" [The workers' alternative in the elections] (PDF). Perspectiva Mundial (in Spanish). Vol. 6, no. 13. The Militant. p. 10. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "Cerro de la campana". El Imparcial (in Spanish). 13 January 2006. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  3. ^ Vázquez Ruiz, Miguel Ángel (1991). Sonora: sociedad, economía, política y cultura [Sonora: society, economy, politics and culture]. Mexico City: UNAM Centro de Investigaciones Interdisciplinarias en Ciencias y Humanidades. p. 149. ISBN 9789683619488.
  4. ^ "Cerro de la campana". El Imparcial (in Spanish). 27 January 2006. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
  5. ^ Pineda, Román (24 October 2021). "Instalan nueva mesa directiva de productores de ganado". Noticias dPoder (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 March 2023.
  6. ^ Barajas Gómez, Jessica Nohemi (24 October 2021). "Toma protesta a nueva mesa directiva de la UNPG Sonora". Opinión Sonora (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 March 2023.