MONTERREY, Mexico By jailing Mexico's most powerful woman, President Enrique Peña Nieto removed a potential political obstacle and fired a warning shot at other union leaders not to get in the way of the ruling party.
Mexico's political world still rippled Wednesday from the imprisonment of Elba Esther Gordillo, the 68-year-old "president for life" of the 1.5 million-member national teachers union, the largest such union in the hemisphere.
Gordillo's arrest Tuesday on corruption charges heartened Mexicans who widely envied her opulent lifestyle, feared her power as a political kingmaker, loathed her stranglehold on the struggling public schools and referred to her by her nickname, la Maestra, or the Teacher.
"Elba, the Teacher, was toppled," wrote a columnist for the newspaper Tabasco Hoy, Leobardo Pérez Marin. "Nothing is impossible!"
Gordillo, who's ruled the powerful teachers union for nearly a quarter-century, was the mightiest of the union bosses opposed to education, financial and energy reforms that Peña Nieto proposed when he took over the presidency Dec. 1.
Her detention in the Santa Martha Acatitla women's prison may galvanize support for the government as it implements reforms, enacted Monday, that give it the ability to hire and fire teachers from the union and set minimum standards for classrooms.
But some analysts and education reformers saw the arrest as more about sweeping away opponents of the centrist Institutional Revolutionary Party known as the PRI, for its Spanish initials than about changing education.
Lying low after Gordillo's arrest was Carlos Romero Deschamps, the head of the powerful oil workers union. Romero, a senator, opposes Peña Nieto's campaign to open up Petroleos Mexicanos, the mammoth state oil firm, to foreign investment. News reports this week showed photos of the red Ferrari Enzo, a rare sports car worth in excess of $1 million, that Romero offered to his grown son as a gift.
Even as she awaits trial, Gordillo retains political power. Her party holds two Senate seats and 10 seats in the Chamber of Deputies. Her daughter and grandson are legislators.
But the Peña Nieto government made clear Wednesday its determination to destroy Gordillo, charging her formally not only with corruption-related money laundering but also with belonging to an organized criminal group, an apparent effort to portray her activities as racketeering.
Attorney General Jesús Murillo Karam appeared on national television Tuesday night to accuse Gordillo and three top aides of misusing more than $200 million in union funds, including for shopping trips at Neiman Marcus in San Diego, real estate and artwork abroad, and plastic surgery. Like many union leaders, Gordillo was a former pillar in the PRI, which ruled Mexico without interruption from 1929 to 2000. She served as the secretary general of the party for three years until 2005.
Gordillo has plenty of dirt on politicians across the political spectrum, and some analysts worried that her eventual successor in the teachers union would follow in her footsteps.
"The great risk is that the PRI recovers control of the union leadership and uses it again for electoral purposes as it has done in the past," said Monica Tapia, a political analyst who's a founder of the Citizens' Coalition for Education.
She said she didn't anticipate the Peña Nieto government getting control of the union and the hiring and firing of teachers for another year or two.
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