Spanish politician (born 1974)
Blanco in 2018
María del Mar Blanco Garrido (born 29 March 1974) is a Spanish People's Party (PP) politician. She has served as a member of the Basque Parliament (2009–2012), Congress of Deputies (2016–2019) and Assembly of Madrid (since 2021).
Biography
Born in Ermua , Biscay , Blanco was the younger sister of People's Party councillor Miguel Ángel Blanco , who was kidnapped and murdered by ETA at the age of 29 in 1997.[ 1] Their parents Consuelo and Miguel, who migrated from the Province of Ourense in Galicia , both died in March 2020; their former died of COVID-19 .[ 2]
Blanco had finished studying tourism shortly before the assassination of her brother.[ 3] She was elected to the Basque Parliament in the 2009 Basque regional election , 6th in the PP's list in Álava .[ 4] In the 2012 election, the party fell to five seats in that constituency but still wanted her presence in parliament at the expense of someone further up the list;[ 5] she relinquished any claim of a seat.[ 6]
In October 2012, Blanco became president of the Victims of Terrorism Foundation (FVT).[ 7] She was the 14th of 15 PP members elected by Madrid to the Congress of Deputies in the 2016 Spanish general election .[ 8] In the April 2019 election , the party fell to seven seats in the capital constituency, but Daniel Lacalle and Andrea Levy renounced their seats to let Blanco and Juan Ignacio Echániz take office.[ 9]
In the November 2019 Spanish general election , Blanco led the PP in the Álava constituency . With just under 15%, the party elected no members in the constituency for the second consecutive time.[ 10] She worked as a consultant on housing for the City Council of Madrid until being elected to the Assembly of Madrid in the 2021 regional election .[ 11]
Around the 2023 Spanish general election , Blanco endorsed the slogan "Let Txapote vote for you " against the prime minister of Spain , Pedro Sánchez . "Txapote" was the nickname of Francisco Javier García Gaztelu , one of the murderers of her brother.[ 12]
References
^ G. Franco, M. Luisa (10 March 2007). "María del Mar Blanco: «Mis padres sabían que Miguel Ángel iba a morir y aceptaron que no se cediera»" [María del Mar Blanco: "My parents knew that Miguel Ángel was going to die and they accepted that he wouldn't give in"]. ABC (in Spanish). Retrieved 20 March 2022 .
^ Segovia, Mikel (1 April 2020). "Fallece por coronavirus la madre de Miguel Angel Blanco dos semanas después que su marido" [Miguel Ángel Blanco's mother dies of coronavirus two weeks after her husband]. El Independiente (in Spanish). Retrieved 20 March 2022 .
^ Juana, José María de (1998). "Luchar por los derechos humanos: Maria del Mar Blanco Garrido" . Cambio 16 (in Spanish) (1396 (AGOST)): 66–68. ISSN 0211-285X .
^ "Listado de los 75 parlamentarios elegidos hoy en el País Vasco" [List of the 75 parliamentarians elected today in the Basque Country]. El Diario Vasco (in Spanish). 2 March 2009. Retrieved 20 March 2022 .
^ "Mari Mar Blanco será parlamentaria, sin haber obtenido escaño" [Mari Mar Blanco will be a parliamentarian, without having obtained a seat] (in Spanish). EITB . 23 October 2012. Retrieved 20 March 2022 .
^ Arias Borque, J. (5 November 2012). "Mar Blanco renuncia al escaño que no consiguió en el Parlamento vasco" [Mar Blanco renounces the seat that she did not win in the Basque Parliament] (in Spanish). Libertad Digital . Retrieved 20 March 2022 .
^ "María del Mar Blanco, nueva presidenta de la Fundación de Víctimas" [María del Mar Blanco, new president of the Victims Foundation] (in Spanish). Noticias de Navarra. EFE . 31 October 2012. Retrieved 20 March 2022 .
^ Calleja, Ignacio S. (27 June 2016). "El PP gana dos escaños en Madrid y el PSOE sube a tercera fuerza" [PP wins two seats in Madrid and PSOE rises to third force]. ABC (in Spanish). Retrieved 20 March 2022 .
^ "Carambola en el PP: Levy y Lacalle dejan paso a Marimar Blanco y Echániz" [Chain reaction in the PP: Levy and Lacalle give way to Marimar Blanco and Echániz] (in Spanish). EFE. 16 May 2019. Retrieved 20 March 2022 .
^ "Álava: EH Bildu gana en votos y Blanco se queda fuera" [Álava: EH Bildu gains in votes and Blanco ends up outside]. El Mundo (in Spanish). EFE. 11 November 2019. Retrieved 20 March 2022 .
^ "Marimar Blanco se despide de su cargo de asesora de Vivienda en el Ayuntamiento al ser elegida diputada regional" [Marimar Blanco resigns from her role as housing consultant in the City Council upon being elected regional deputy] (in Spanish). Europa Press . 19 May 2021. Retrieved 20 March 2022 .
^ Vázquez, Ángeles (11 July 2023). "El lema 'Que te vote Txapote' enfrenta a las víctimas del terrorismo" [The slogan 'Let Txapote vote for you' confronts the victims of terrorism]. El Periódico de Catalunya (in Spanish). Retrieved 11 August 2023 .