In 1996 he was designated Consejero Electoral of the Federal Electoral Institute (IFE) but left that position in 2000 after Governor Pablo Salazar Mendiguchía invited him to become a member of his cabinet in Chiapas. In 2003 Zebadúa was elected to serve in the Chamber of Deputies representing a district in the state of Chiapas.[1]
In 2006 he unsuccessfully tried to obtain the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) candidacy to the Chiapas gubernatorial elections to be held on August 20, 2006. Unable to secure the PRD ticket, he was ultimately selected as the candidate of the New Alliance Party; however, ten days before the election, he called on New Alliance supporters to vote for the PRI-PVEM coalition candidate José Antonio Aguilar Bodegas instead, in a last-ditch attempt to prevent the PRD from winning.[1]
He was mentioned as a main operative in the "Estafa Maestra" affair. He was the Chief Administrative Officer of the Department of Agrarian, Territorial and Urban Development, where Ms. Rosario Robles was Secretary. The affair involved major falsification of documents to obtain payments in federal contracts. Ms. Robles was indicted.[3]
Bibliography
Zebadúa, Emilio (2009). Diálogos para la reforma educativa [Dialogues for Education Reform] (in Spanish). México: Zenago. ISBN978-607-95246-0-9. OCLC636610621.
Zebadúa-González, Emilio (1991). Bankers and revolutionaries: the stabilization of Mexico, 1914-1925 (Ph. D. thesis). Harvard University. OCLC26072363.
^"Emilio Zebadúa González" (in Spanish). México, Distrito Federal: Instituto Nacional para la Evaluación de la Educación. January 17, 2007. Archived from the original on March 23, 2012. Retrieved April 23, 2011.
^Ureste Cava, Manuel, Miriam Castillo Moya and Nayeli Roldan Sanchez. La
Estafa Maestra. Graduados En Desaparecer El Dinero Público. Ciudad de México, Temas e Hoy, 2018. ISBN9786070747502.
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