Gabriela Cerruti

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Gabriela Cerruti
Sesión 13-06-2018 Diputada Cerruti Gabriela.jpg
in 2018
National Deputy
Assumed office
10 December 2017
ConstituencyCity of Buenos Aires
Legislator of the City of Buenos Aires
In office
10 December 2007 – 10 December 2015
Minister of Social and Human Rights of the City of Buenos Aires
In office
7 March 2006 – 10 December 2007
MayorJorge Telerman
Preceded byGabriela Alegre
Succeeded byHelio Rebot
Personal details
Born
Gabriela Carla Cerruti

(1965-12-09) 9 December 1965 (age 55)
Punta Alta, Argentina
Political partyNew Encounter
Other political
affiliations
Front for Victory (until 2017)
Citizen's Unity (2017–2019)
Frente de Todos (2019–present)
Spouse(s)Lucas Guagnini (1997–2007)
Alma materUniversity of Westminster
OccupationJournalist, writer, politician
Websitewww.gabrielacerruti.com Edit this at Wikidata

Gabriela Carla Cerruti (born 9 December 1965) is an Argentine journalist, writer, and politician. In 2007 she was elected to the Buenos Aires City Legislature, and subsequently re-elected for the 2011–2015 term. She was part of the New Encounter bloc, a party for which she was one of the main references in her district. She is currently a member of the Chamber of Deputies for the term 2017–2021 for Citizen's Unity.

Biography[]

Gabriela Cerruti began her university studies in journalism at the National University of La Plata's School of Journalism and Social Communication in 1983. She pursued graduate studies at the Center for Communication and Information Studies of the University of Westminster in London, where she graduated with a Master of Arts with the thesis The War Against the Public Sphere.[1]

Beginning in 1983, she alternated her studies and her teaching activity with the professional, making various contributions, first for different media in La Plata and Buenos Aires and then, in 1985, as editor at the national news agency .[2] In 1987 she became a reporter at the weekly Somos, El Periodista, and Página/12.[2]

She continued her professional development at Página/12, going through different posts as a special editor until 1991, an editor until 1993, and a special correspondent to Thailand, Vietnam, Washington D.C., New York, Paris, Brussels, Rome, Frankfurt, Bonn, Strasbourg, Mexico, Chile, Uruguay, and Madrid.

In September 1991 she published her first book, El Octavo círculo. Crónica y entretelones de la Argentina Menemista,[2] with Sergio Ciancaglini at Editorial Planeta of Buenos Aires.

In June 1993 she published El Jefe, vida y obra de Carlos Saúl Menem,[2] a bestseller reissued 19 times. This book earned her reviews in all the most prominent media in Argentina and in El País (Spain), The Guardian and Financial Times (United Kingdom), and The New York Times (United States). In 1993, she was appointed correspondent of Página/12 in London, during which time she continued her postgraduate studies and specialized in issues related to collective memory.

Back in her home country, in 1995 she became Chief of the Political Section of Página/12 until 1997, when she founded and assumed direction of the weekly Trespuntos, where an interview with Alfredo Astiz was published. In June of that same year she published her third book Herederos del Silencio, a testimonial essay also at Editorial Planeta.[2]

Although at the university level she had already been committed to political activity since her participation at the Student Center of Journalism and Social Communication, in the Student Council, and as a member of the Commission for the reform of the curriculum of the School of Social Communication of the National University of La Plata, it was in the year 2000 when she fully entered into public service. She participated in the foundation and assumed Executive Direction of the Provincial Commission for the Memory of Buenos Aires Province.[2] From that year until 2004 she also directed Puentes, a debate magazine on the construction of collective memory published by the Commission.

In that same period she began working in the field of the Government of the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires, coordinating the Open City Program under the Ministry of Culture, until in November 2004 she assumed the Cabinet Office of the Vice-Government Office. Then, in March 2006, she was appointed the city's Minister of Human and Social Rights.[2]

In the elections held in Buenos Aires in June 2007, she headed list 505 of that city's deputies,[3] and was elected to serve from December 2007 to December 2011. During the first two years she was a member of the Commissions of Economic Development, Mercosur, and Employment Policies; Woman, Childhood, Adolescence and Youth; and Public Works and Services. Until the end of 2010 she was also on the Committee for Budget, Finance, Financial Administration, and Tax Policy. During 2010 and 2011 she was on the Commission on Constitutional Affairs and the Special Commission on Public Policies for Full Citizenship.

In March 2010, making use of her perspective, experience, and public commitment as an official and journalist, she turned over the result of an investigation carried out during more than two years of legislative work in her book El pibe. Negocios, intrigas y secretos de Mauricio Macri, el hombre que quiere ser Presidente, also for Editorial Planeta.[4]

Since December 2009, when it was formed, she has been at the head of the New Encounter parliamentary bloc.

In July 2011, she renewed her mandate as deputy, heading the list of the Nuevo Encuentro Front in its first electoral participation in the city as a political party after having achieved legal status in the district.[4]

She joined the commissions of Justice, Social Communication, Protection and Use of Public Space, and continued at Constitutional Affairs.

She completed a PhD at the University of Westminster, with a thesis on the destruction of the public sphere during the self-proclaimed National Reorganization Process that governed Argentina from 1976 to 1983[1] when Argentina invaded the Falkland Islands. She has noted that Argentina's claim to the islands is supported by other nearby countries and a political rather than a military solution is the only option.[5]

In 2015, she was precandidate to the Head of Government of the City of Buenos Aires for the Front for Victory, standing for the primary elections in April and the general elections in July 2015. However, she could not participate in the latter because she had obtained less than 2.2% of the votes. The internal leadership of the electoral front was in the hands of Mariano Recalde, who was a candidate in the general elections on 5 July.

In 2016 Gabriela Cerruti criminally denounced Mauricio Macri for "negotiations incompatible with the public function", citing "omissions" between two affidavits presented by Macri and "loans granted to the businessman  [es], one of the City's main contractors."[6][7][8]

In the 2017 legislative elections of the City of Buenos Aires, she participated as the second precandidate of Citizen's Unity in the primary with Itai Hagman (NOW Buenos Aires) and Guillermo Moreno (Honesty and Courage). After Citizen's Unity's victory in the primary, she was presented as a second candidate for national deputy by the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires, being elected along with Daniel Filmus and Juan Cabandié,[9] consecrating Unidad Porteña as the top opposition party in percentage of votes (21.74%).

In 2018 Cerruti spoke up in parliament in support of the legalisation of abortion. She shared her own experiences of having an abortion in a country where the procedure is illegal.[10]

Personal life[]

Gabriela Cerruti is the daughter of Rosa Riasol and Ruggero Cerruti,[1] and the third of six sisters: Sandra, Fabiana, Gabriela, Viviana, Carina, and Andrea. From 1997 to 2007 she was married to the journalist Lucas Guagnini, with whom she had two children.[2]

Works[]

  • 1991: El octavo círculo, crónica de la Argentina menemista (together with Sergio Ciancaglini)
  • 1996: El jefe (about former President Carlos Menem)
  • 1997: Herederos del silencio (about the dictatorship)
  • 2010: El pibe (about the then Head of Government of the City of Buenos Aires, Mauricio Macri)
  • 2014: Vivir bien en la ciudad (proposals for better living in the city)
  • 2020: La Revolución de las Viejas

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Gabriela Cerruti". Revista Surcos en América Latina (in Spanish). Retrieved 9 August 2018.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h Penlowskyj, Juan Ignacio. "'Dame diez años y me veo como Presidenta'" ['Give Me Ten Years and I See Myself as President']. Noticias (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2 July 2007. Retrieved 9 August 2018.
  3. ^ "Horacio Lenz, hipertelermanista". Noticias Urbanas (in Spanish). 18 May 2007. Retrieved 9 August 2018.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b "Gabriela Cerruti presentará su libro en Mendoza" [Gabriela Cerruti Will Present Her Book in Mendoza]. MDZ (in Spanish). 15 October 2015. Retrieved 10 August 2018.
  5. ^ Simpson, John (2 April 2012). "Falkland Islands: How strong is Argentina's position?". BBC News. Retrieved 11 August 2018.
  6. ^ "Gabriela Cerruti denunció penalmente a Mauricio Macri por 'negociaciones incompatibles con la función pública'" [Gabriela Cerruti Criminally Denounces Mauricio Macri for 'Negotiations Incompatible with the Public Function']. La Nación (in Spanish). 6 October 2015. Archived from the original on 28 June 2016. Retrieved 9 August 2018.
  7. ^ Brown, Andrés (30 September 2015). "El préstamo de Macri a su amigo Caputo despertó sospechas en la oposición" [Macri's Loan to His Friend Caputo Aroused Suspicion in the Opposition]. En Orsai (in Spanish). Retrieved 9 August 2018.
  8. ^ "Bajo lupa: ¿Quién es Caputo, el empresario al que Macri le prestó más de $18 millones?" [Under Magnifying Glass: Who is Caputo, the Businessman Whom Macro Loaned More than $18 Million?] (in Spanish). Minutouno.com. 29 September 2015. Retrieved 9 August 2018.
  9. ^ "La lista de Filmus ganó la interna de Unidad Porteña" [The Filmus List Won the Unit of Unidad Porteña]. Diario Popular (in Spanish). 14 August 2017. Retrieved 10 August 2018.
  10. ^ "A growing women's movement could help legalize abortion in Argentina". Roads & Kingdoms. 26 July 2018. Retrieved 11 August 2018.

External links[]

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