Office: | Deputy of the Congress of the Union for Querétaro's 1st district |
Term Start: | 2018 |
Birth Date: | 1978 3, df=yes |
Education: | Autonomous University of Querétaro |
Occupation: | Politician, lawyer |
Office1: | Member of the Senate of Mexico for Querétaro |
Termend1: | 2018 |
Termstart1: | March 3, 2015 |
Predecessor1: | Francisco Domínguez Servién |
Sonia Rocha Acosta (March 30, 1978) is a Mexican politician and attorney from Querétaro. A member of the National Action Party (PAN),[1] she was elected to the federal Chamber of Deputies in 2018. From 2015 to 2018, she was a Senator from Querétaro.[2]
Sonia Rocha Acosta has a degree in law and a master's degree in state and municipal public administration from the Autonomous University of Querétaro.[3]
Rocha Acosta first became involved in PAN at age 16 as a member of the party's youth group.[4] In 2003, she joined the office of the inspector of the Querétaro attorney general. From 2006 to 2009, she served in the Querétaro state legislature.
In the 2012 general election, she was elected as a substitute for Senator Francisco Domínguez Servién.[5] Following Domínguez's leave of absence to mount a candidacy for Governor of Querétaro, she went on to replace him as a member of the Senate on March 3, 2015.
As a Senator, she pushed a proposal to require all members of Congress to have a higher education degree.
She remained a member of the Senate until 2018. In the 2018 general election, Rocha was elected to the Chamber of Deputies, representing Querétaro's first district in the LXIV Legislature;[6] she was re-elected to the same seat in the 2021 midterms.[7] Her headquarters is the city of Cadereyta de Montes.[8] She became a member of PAN's national council in 2021.
In 2023, Rocha Acosta opposed spending proposals introduced by members of Morena in Congress, arguing it misallocated resources and would contribute to the national debt.[9] Rocha Acosta chose not to seek reelection for the Chamber of Deputies in 2024, and instead ran to be a substitute for PAN Senate candidate Guadalupe Murguía Gutiérrez.[10]
Rocha Acosta and fellow PAN deputy Madeleine Bonnafoux Alcaraz were reported to be supporters of the National Front for the Family coalition, which opposes the legalization of abortion in Mexico.[11] Rocha Acosta criticized comments by Morena federal deputy Miroslava Sánchez, who led the Health Commission in the Chamber of Deputies, that suggested there is a consensus among parties to legalize abortion.[12]