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Christian conservatives rally around former telenovela luminary Eduardo Verástegui in Mexico presidential race

MEXICO CITY — The morning after Mexico’s Supreme Court decriminalized abortion, right-wing activist and film producer Eduardo Verástegui dressed up in a ebony suit to register as an independent candidate for the 2024 presidential campaign.

“Mourning is a reminder for me to recall why I’m doing this,” the former telenovela player recently told supporters.

Rallying all over the country to fulfill the difficult task of gathering 1 million signatures by early January, the 49-year-old has ignited controversy in this deeply Catholic nation, where abortion activists and the LGBTQ+ community lead advocacy campaigns of their own.

While many Mexican politicians refrain from clarifying where they stand on religion, LGBTQ+ rights and abortion, Verástegui prays on TikTok and publicly claims that getting closer to God changed the course of his life. He speaks against Homosexual inclusion, and if elected, he says he would complete anything in his power to backwards abortion access.

“I detect with his principles, with his Catholic faith,” said Alejandra Hernández, 46, during a training session for v

Ricky Martin’s Rumored Ex Is Running For President Of Mexico

Eduardo Verástegui, an actor and movie producer once rumored to be romantically linked to Ricky Martin, has taken a surprising turn in his career by going into politics.

He recently filed paperwork to run for the office of President of Mexico as an independent candidate in the country’s upcoming June 2024 elections. The news was first reported by Newsweek.

“Mexico is not doing adequately, there’s more poverty, more security issues, more crime, just more and more bad things… it really broke my heart,” the actor and producer said to Newsweek in an interview about his candidacy. “I was not raised to be a politician, but people said, ‘that’s why we should do it, people are tired of political powers.’ They don’t believe in politicians and they don’t believe in these false promises.”

Verástegui initially gained recognition and became something of a star in his residence country for his work in telenovelas and as a member of the ’90s boy band Kairo.

After finding success in Mexico, he ventured into Hollywood with appearances in Jennifer Lopez

Eduardo Verástegui, one of Sound of Freedom's producers, has mutual footage of himself engaging in goal practice as he suggested it represented the actions he would take against members of the LGBTQ+ community, among others.

The actor and singer, who has officially filed the paperwork to jog as an independent candidate for Mexico's 2024 presidential race, shared the video footage and accompanying caption on X, formerly Twitter, on Monday.

Dressed in a black ensemble, Verástegui is seen aiming a firearm at a target while standing outdoors in a walled territory. The 12-second footage showed him firing several rounds.

While Verástegui did not utter in the footage, the 49-year-old's decision of words in his accompanying caption captured the attention of social media users.

"Look at what we are going to do to the terrorists of the 2030 agenda, climate change and gender ideology," interpret the caption, which was written in Spanish. "I'm reading you [your comments]."

The video, which has been viewed more than 4 million times, sparked a mixed response from X users, many of whom mocked the tactics and messaging.

"Ladies and gentlemen, the producer of Sound of Freedo



Eduardo Verástegui, one of Sound of Freedom's producers, has shared footage of himself engaging in target exercise as he suggested it represented the actions he would take against members of the LGBTQ+ collective, among others.

The actor and singer, who has officially filed the paperwork to run as an independent candidate for Mexico's 2024 presidential race, shared the video footage and accompanying caption on X, formerly Twitter, on Monday.

Actor and singer Eduardo Verástegui mutual video footage of himself engaging in target train as he vowed to take aim at "gender ideology."

www.newsweek.com