María Alejandra Vicuña Muñoz (born 13 February 1978) is an Ecuadorian politician who served as the Vice President of Ecuador under PresidentLenin Moreno between January and December 2018,[2] previously as the Housing and Urban Development Minister of Ecuador.[3]
Career
Vicuña was first elected to serve in the National Assembly in 2009, and was re-elected to serve again in 2013.[4] While serving in the National Assembly, she served as vice president of the largest commission relating to the health and wellbeing of Ecuadorean citizens, and was a founding member of the Commission on Education, Science, Technology, and Communication.[5]
She was named Minister of Urban Development and Housing by President Lenin Moreno in May 2017.[6] Upon the suspension of Vice President Jorge Glas, Vicuña was named Acting Vice President until a resolution on Glas's corruption charges was made.[7]
Vice President of Ecuador
Glas was convicted for corruption in connection to the Odebrecht bribery scandal in December 2017.[8] The National Assembly then elected a new Vice President from a candidate shortlist chosen by President Moreno.[9]
On 6 January 2018, Vicuña was formally sworn in as Vice President of Ecuador.[9] She was confirmed after 70 assembly members voted for her to take office, 17 lawmakers voting against the nomination, and 19 abstentions.[10] She was the second woman to ever serve as Vice President of Ecuador, after Rosalía Arteaga took office in 1996.[7]
On December 3, 2018, Vicuña was suspended from her duties as vice president after a corruption scandal.[11][12] On 4 December 2018, Vicuña announced her desire to resign as vice president.[13][14][15][16][17] On 11 December 2018, Otto Sonnenholzner was elected as Vice President of Ecuador after the National Assembly approved him for the position.[18]
In 2020 she was sentenced to one year in prison for extorting payments from her political advisors in exchange for continued employment.[19] In 2021, this sentence was increased to two years; in October 2022, the prison sentence was reduced to one year, but she was required to pay restitution within six months.[20]