First presidency of Alan García (1985-1990) She was elected to Congress as a Member of the Chamber of Deputies for the term 1985–1990. She entered the Government when President
Alan García appointed her
Minister of Education in 1987, after the resignation of the Cabinet led by Prime Minister
Luis Alva Castro. At the helm, she promised to attend the demands of the teachers syndicate, SUTEP. She began with a raise of 35% for the public teachers. She visited schools in
Lima and Provinces. Surprisingly, in 1988, the Electoral Committee of the Party elected her as Candidate for
Mayor of Lima. She resigned from office in August 1988 to run for the 1989 Lima mayorship elections, placing fourth.
Senate and presidential nominee After placing fourth in the mayorship race, she ran for a seat in the Senate, gaining the highest number of votes (328,714), thus elected Senator for the term 1990–1995. Her term as Senator was cut short when President
Alberto Fujimori dissolved Congress with his self-coup in 1992. In 1995 Cabanillas ran for the presidency as the
Peruvian Aprista Party nominee, attaining only 4.11% of the popular vote. Her running mates were former senator
Jorge Lozada Stanbury and Alejandro Santa María Silva.
Return to Congress (2000) and second presidency of Alan García (2006-2011) In 2000, she was elected to Congress under the
Peruvian Aprista Party. She was reelected in 2001 and 2006. When
Alan García was elected president for the term 2006–2011, Congress elected her
President of the Congress for the annual term of 2006–2007. On February 19, 2009, President
Alan García appointed her Minister of the Interior. As such she was in charge of the Police forces that were sent to the amazon region of
Bagua to repress Natives who were protesting against the government that was giving away their ancestral lands to foreign corporations for oil drilling, mining and logging. As a result of the violent intervention of the heavily armed police and military forces over 50 Natives were killed and nearly 200 wounded. As Minister of the Interior she gave the order to attack the Natives. She resigned alongside the Prime Minister
Yehude Simon on July 11. She served in Congress until her term expired in 2011, as she failed to win a fourth consecutive election, receiving a minority of votes, prompting her to retire from politics. She remains a very influential leader in the
Peruvian Aprista Party, serving as chair of the party's Electoral Tribunal since 2017. She was reelected to the same position in 2019. == See also ==