# Marcelo Ebrard

Marcelo Ebrard is a Mexican politician who served as Secretary of Foreign Affairs of Mexico from 2018 to 2023, negotiating major trade deals and immigration agreements with the United States. He previously served as Mayor of Mexico City and was a leading presidential contender before Claudia Sheinbaum's nomination.

## Quick Facts

- **Born:** October 10, 1959
- **Birthplace:** Mexico City, Mexico
- **Nationality:** Mexican
- **Occupation:** Secretary of Economy of Mexico, Former Mexico City Mayor
- **Category:** Power & Politics
- **Net Worth:** $3M (est. 2024)
- **Also Known As:** El Canciller, Marcelo

## Overview

Marcelo Luis Ebrard Casaubón is a Mexican politician and internationalist who has served as the secretary of economy since 2024. A member of the National Regeneration Movement (Morena), he previously served as secretary of foreign affairs under President Andrés Manuel López Obrador from 2018 to 2023. He served as Head of Government of the Federal District from 2006 to 2012.

## Wikipedia Context

This profile section is complemented from Wikipedia for Marcelo Ebrard. Mexican politician (born 1959)

## Sources

Primary source page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcelo_Ebrard

## Timeline

### 1915 — A descendant of the French emigrant wave from Barcelonnette in 1915, Ebrard is...
A descendant of the French emigrant wave from Barcelonnette in 1915, Ebrard is the son of architect Marcelo Ebrard Maure and Marcela Casaubón

### 1959 — Birth
Birth of Marcelo Ebrard.

### 1976 — After volunteering in the presidential campaigns of 1976 and 1982, serving as...
After volunteering in the presidential campaigns of 1976 and 1982, serving as an advisor to the general secretary in 1988, and being elected to the Chamber of Deputies

### 1978 — Ebrard became a member of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) in 1978
Ebrard became a member of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) in 1978

### 1995 — Democratic Center Party of Mexico and AMLO Ebrard left the PRI along with...
Democratic Center Party of Mexico and AMLO Ebrard left the PRI along with Manuel Camacho Solís in 1995 to found the now-defunct Party of the Democratic Center (PCD)

### 2000 — AMLO's Government in Mexico CIty In 2000 he briefly campaigned for the 2000...
AMLO's Government in Mexico CIty In 2000 he briefly campaigned for the 2000 Head of Government election for the PCD before stepping down in March 2000 and throwing his support behind Andrés Manuel López Obrador as the candidate of the multi-party Alliance for Mexico City

### 2002 — Following the election, he joined López Obrador's cabinet as secretary of...
Following the election, he joined López Obrador's cabinet as secretary of public security in 2002 after the resignation of Leonel Godoy as head of this agency

### 2004 — 2004–2006 Ebrard, the city's chief of police, and Ramón Huerta, the Federal...
2004–2006 Ebrard, the city's chief of police, and Ramón Huerta, the Federal Secretary of Public Safety, were accused of not organizing a timely rescue effort when three undercover federal police officers were lynched by a mob in one of the capital's most impoverished suburbs in Tláhuac on 23 Novembe

### 2006 — Although some in the business sector criticized these actions as an attack on...
Although some in the business sector criticized these actions as an attack on private property — actions that received the support of the federal government — the initiative to seize ownership of these properties, as well as the introduction of video surveillance cameras, together with social develo

### 2026 — Wikipedia Complement
Profile metadata and editorial blocks were complemented using Wikipedia and Wikidata references.

### 2026 — Profile Update
Structured profile components were updated to improve completeness.

## Quotes

> "Profile note: Marcelo Ebrard was complemented using Wikipedia reference material."
> — Marcelo Ebrard, Peoplebio editorial note (2026)

> "Editorial note: This block stores profile notes and source context, not attributed quotations."
> — Marcelo Ebrard, Peoplebio editorial note (2026)

> "Source note: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcelo_Ebrard"
> — Marcelo Ebrard, Peoplebio editorial note (2026)

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Source: https://peoplebio.info/p/marcelo-ebrard