Cristina Reyes


Cristina Eugenia Reyes Hidalgo is an Ecuadorian poet, lawyer, and politician. She is currently a member of the National Assembly for the Social Christian Party and part of the.

Biography

Cristina Reyes was born on August 26, 1981 into a Catholic family, the daughter of doctors Xavier Reyes Feijoo and Cristina Hidalgo de Reyes. She has two younger brothers, Xavier and Belisario Reyes Hidalgo. She studied at Las Mercedarias Catholic school, and was named queen of the city of Guayaquil in 2001. She studied law at the Catholic University of Santiago de Guayaquil and earned a master's degree in Political Action from Francisco de Vitoria University in Spain.
She was a program host at TC Televisión, Telesistema,, and Ecuavisa.
Her first appearance as a reporter on television was on the program Ventana a la Calle, hosted by Kenneth Carrera, who was later replaced by Reyes when he became involved in politics.

Political career

In November 2007, Reyes was a member of the Constituent Assembly for the Social Christian Party, where she joined the panel on Sovereignty and Latin American integration. For the, she was nominated as city councilor for the alliance between the Social Christian Party and the, obtaining the second highest vote among the councilors, behind only.
In November 2012 she resigned as councilor to participate in the, in which she was elected as a National Assembly member representing Guayas Province. During her term she was part of the Workers' and Social Security Commission.
In the she retained her seat in the Assembly.
In August 2017, she accused the Legislative Administration of inefficiency in an interview, which caused her to be sanctioned in January 2018 with a 10-day suspension without pay. In response, on January 16, she filed a protective action with the to counteract the measure. A week later, Judge Lucila Gómez dismissed the sanction, accepting the protective action in her favor.
On January 8, 2019, Reyes was retained as the third member of the Legislative Council with 79 votes in favor, 27 against, and 11 abstentions, following the resignation of.

Publications