Campbell was a deputy of the
Citizen Action Party for the 2002–2006 term, serving as leader from 2003 to 2006 and as the party's president from 2005 to 2009. After serving in the legislature for four years (2002–2006) and running for vice president in 2006, Campbell decided to
seek the nomination of the PAC. She traveled the country in an
RV, taking her anti-corruption and accountability message to PAC voters. Three other candidates vied to represent PAC in the 2014 national elections:
Juan Carlos Mendoza,
Luis Guillermo Solís, and
Ronald Solís Bolaños. As of February 2013, she was the most popular opposition candidate; however, she bowed out of the race to
Luis Guillermo Solís. Solís became Costa Rica's president elect in March 2014. In March 2014, Campbell won a deputy position in
San Jose as a PAC candidate. When Solís became the
de facto president elect, he mentioned that Campbell would be one of his choices for President of the
Legislative Assembly, although
Henry Mora Jiménez became the President of the Legislative Assembly in May 2014.
Congresswoman During her terms as a deputy, Campbell focused primarily on issues related to structural fiscal reform, emphasizing the progressivity of the
tax system and efficiency in
public spending. In January 2016, she called on fellow deputies to discuss the need for a fiscal agreement to steer public finances toward sustainability. She championed the
constitutional reform for the removal of deputies who failed in their duty of probity, the proposal to repeal the National Intelligence and Security Directorate (DIS), the initiative to regulate
lobbying in public functions, the declaration of August as the historical month of Afro-descendants in Costa Rica, the Law to Prevent and Punish All Forms of Discrimination, Racism, and Intolerance, a bill to prohibit the commercialization of illegal lotteries, and the Law against
Street Harassment. As a member of the Commission on Control of Income and Public Spending, she participated in investigations on the setting of rates by the Regulatory Authority for Public Services, the lack of execution of funds from an international loan with the
International Bank for Reconstruction and Development to finance the Limón Ciudad-Puerto project, as well as the government's intention to acquire the El Tobogán Corporate Center to build the so-called "Government City". She also served on the Human Rights, International Relations, Economic Affairs, and Women's commissions.
Chancellor After being elected vice president alongside the presidential formula of Carlos Alvarado Quesada, Campbell assumed the position of Minister of Foreign Relations (MREC) on 8 May 2018, becoming the first woman to hold the position of Chancellor of Costa Rica. Campbell established, for the first time, the axes of foreign policy via Executive Decree: environmental and
climate change diplomacy, diplomacy for innovation, knowledge, and education, diplomacy for social inclusion, culture, and gender parity, diplomacy for peace, democracy, transparency, and the fight against corruption, economic and trade diplomacy, multilateral diplomacy, regional diplomacy, and bilateral diplomacy. Additionally, she created the Presidential Council for International Cooperation, Foreign Policy, and International Business to monitor these axes and promote economic diplomacy. She made official visits to
Panama,
Colombia,
Italy, the
Vatican and
Spain to strengthen bilateral relations and expressed Costa Rica's position regarding the crises in
Nicaragua and
Venezuela at the
Organization of American States, the EU-CELAC summit, and the UN General Assembly. through Resolution 75/170 on 16 December 2020. In August 1920, the First International Convention of the Black Peoples of the World was held in
New York. As a result of discussions led by
Marcus Garvey with thousands of delegates from different countries, the
Declaration of the Rights of the Negro Peoples of the World was adopted. Article 53 of this declaration proclaimed 31 August of each year as an international day to celebrate black peoples. According to Campbell, the intention behind proclaiming the International Day for People of African Descent was to do justice to the struggles, hopes, and resistances, bringing to light this milestone in the context of the growing mobilization for racial justice, equality, and inclusion of millions of people under the
Black Lives Matter motto.
United Nations Permanent Forum on People of African Descent On 21 December 2021, the United Nations General Assembly selected Campbell as one of the ten members of the
Permanent Forum on People of African Descent. This forum, acting as an advisory body to the
UN Human Rights Council, is composed of ten independent experts with recognized expertise in Afro-descendant issues and human rights. These experts serve in a voluntary capacity and are not part of the United Nations staff, receiving no financial compensation. The composition of this advisory mechanism follows geographical criteria: five members are elected by the United Nations General Assembly, while the other five are appointed by Afro-descendant organizations. These experts work individually, with terms lasting three years and the possibility of re-election. The initiative to establish this forum arose after Campbell advocated before the General Assembly and in various bilateral meetings for the urgency of creating this body with the purpose of improving the quality of life for Afro-descendant people worldwide. == Awards ==