María Inés Pilatti Vergara Explained

María Inés Pilatti Vergara
Office:Councillor of Magistracy
Appointer:Senate
Term Start:6 February 2020
Office1:National Senator
Constituency1:Chaco
Term Start1:10 December 2013
Office2:National Deputy
Term Start2:10 December 2009
Term End2:10 December 2013
Constituency2:Chaco
Office3:Provincial Deputy of Chaco
Term Start3:10 December 2005
Term End3:10 December 2009
Term Start4:10 December 1997
Term End4:10 December 2001
Birth Date:2 August 1958
Birth Place:Resistencia, Chaco Province, Argentina
Party:Justicialist Party
Alma Mater:National University of the Northeast

María Inés Patricia Elizabeth Pilatti Vergara (born 2 August 1958) is an Argentine politician, currently serving as a National Senator for Chaco Province since 2013. She previously served as a National Deputy from 2009 to 2013, elected in Chaco as well, and as a member of the Chaco Province Chamber of Deputies during two non-consecutive terms from 1997 to 2001 and from 2005 to 2009.

Early life and education

Pilatti Vergara was born on 2 August 1958 in Resistencia, Chaco Province.[1] She finished high school at the Escuela de Comercio N°5 in Resistencia and studied law at the National University of the Northeast Faculty of Law and Social and Political Sciences.[2]

Political career

Pilatti Vergara's political activism began in the Justicialist Party. She was elected to the Chaco Province Chamber of Deputies in 1997, serving until 2001, and then again in 2005, serving until 2009.[1] As a provincial deputy, Pilatti Vergara was one of the most prominent opponents of then-Vice Governor of Chaco, Miguel Pibernus, who was forced to resign and arrested in 2001 on embezzlement charges.[3] [4] At the 2009 legislative elections, Pilatti Vergara was elected to the Argentine Chamber of Deputies in the Chaco Merece Más ("Chaco Deserves More"; the provincial name of the Front for Victory) list; she was sworn in as National Deputy on 10 December 2009, and served until the expiration of her term on 10 December 2013.[1]

National Senator

At the 2013 legislative elections, Pilatti Vergara was the second candidate in the Front for Victory (FPV) list to the Argentine Senate in Chaco, and was comfortably elected as the list received 60.62% of the vote.[5] She was sworn in on 28 November 2013, with her mandate beginning on 10 December 2013.[6]

In 2016, Pilatti Vergara introduced legislation to aimed at protecting breast-feeding women; her bill would have mandated the creation of "public lactaries" and declared 12 July the "National Day for the Free Exercise of Maternal Breast-feeding".[7] She also supported a 2019 initiative to introduce a travesti trans work quota in the Argentine national government; although the initiative was not debated in the Senate, a similar initiative was established by a decree issued by President Alberto Fernández in 2020.[8] [9]

She was re-elected for a second six-year term in 2019 as the second candidate in the Frente de Todos list in Chaco.[10]

Pilatti Vergara voted consistently in favour of the Voluntary Interruption of Pregnancy bill, which legalized abortion in Argentina; the first such bill was struck down by her fellow senators on 8 August 2018, while the second was passed by the Senate on 30 December 2020.[11] [12]

She has been a member of the Council of Magistracy of the Nation in representation of the Senate since 6 February 2020.[13]

Personal life

Pilatti Vergara resides in Resistencia; she is married and has two sons.[1] In a 2020 interview, Pilatti Vergara stated that it was her son who convinced her to vote in favor of the legalization of abortion.[14]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: María Inés Pilatti Vergara. senado.gob.ar. 30 December 2020. es.
  2. Web site: Conti, Bellota y Pilatti Vergara disertarán en el PJ sobre la "Resistencia Feminista Popular". Chaco Día por Día. 25 May 2018. 30 December 2020. es.
  3. Web site: Renunció Miguel Pibernus, vicegobernador del Chaco. La Nación. 6 June 2001. 30 December 2020. es.
  4. Web site: Detuvieron a Miguel Pibernus, ex vicegobernador de Chaco. La Nación. 26 June 2001. 30 December 2020. es.
  5. Web site: Recorriendo las Elecciones. elecciones.gob.ar. 30 December 2020. es.
  6. Web site: Aguilar, Pilatti Vergara y Rozas juraron como nuevos senadores. Tres Líneas. 28 November 2013. 30 December 2020. es.
  7. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20180728035648/http://www.diarionorte.com/article/140367/pilatti-vergara-presento-proyectos-para-proteger-a-lactantes-y-mujeres-que-amamantan. Pilatti Vergara presentó proyectos para proteger a lactantes y mujeres que amamantan. 25 July 2016. 28 July 2018. 30 December 2020. es.
  8. Web site: Este viernes se realiza el conversatorio "Conversádonxs travestis trans". Chaco Día por Día. 28 March 2019. 30 December 2020. es.
  9. Web site: Por decreto, el Gobierno estableció un cupo laboral para travestis, transexuales y transgénero. Infobae. es. 4 September 2020. 30 December 2020.
  10. Web site: Pilatti Vergara: "En el Congreso habrá sesiones en las próximas semanas de diciembre y en enero del año que viene; y el proyecto prioritario que se tratará será el Presupuesto 2020". Partido Justicialista Distrito Chaco. 30 November 2019. 30 December 2020. es.
  11. News: Así hemos contado el 'no' del Senado al aborto legal en Argentina. El País. Rivas Molina. Federico. Centenera. Mar. 9 August 2018. 26 December 2020. es.
  12. Web site: Argentina on brink of historic vote to legalise abortion. The Guardian. 30 December 2020. 30 December 2020. Phillips. Tom. Goñi. Uki.
  13. Web site: María Inés Pilatti Vergara y Mariano Recalde prestaron juramento como Consejeros de la Magistratura. Council of Magistracy of the Nation. 6 February 2020. 5 January 2021. es.
  14. Web site: María Inés Pilatti Vergara, la senadora a la que sus hijos le "abrieron la cabeza" sobre el aborto. Página/12. Criado. Rocío. 28 December 2020. 30 December 2020. es.