ECUADOR · POLITICS
Key Facts
—The resignation: Foreign minister Gabriela Sommerfeld stepped down on June 7, citing personal and health reasons.
—The other reason: Days earlier her party had named her as its candidate for mayor of Quito.
—The rule: Ecuadorian law requires ministers to leave office before registering as election candidates.
—The replacement: President Daniel Noboa named Roberto Kury, the telecoms minister, as the new top diplomat the same night.
—The tenure: Sommerfeld had led the foreign ministry since 2023, when Noboa first took office.
—The backdrop: The change lands amid a wider reshuffle and merging of ministries by the Noboa government.
The Ecuador foreign minister has resigned citing health and personal reasons, but the timing points to a more political explanation: she is set to run for mayor of Quito, and Ecuadorian law made her leave the cabinet first.
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The Ecuador foreign minister steps down
Gabriela Sommerfeld announced her departure on June 7 in an open letter to Ecuadorians, published through the foreign ministry’s own channels.
In it she said she was leaving for personal and health reasons, and thanked President Daniel Noboa for the trust he had placed in her. She called representing Ecuador the greatest honour of her life.
Within minutes, the presidency confirmed her replacement. Roberto Kury, who had been serving as telecommunications minister, was named the country’s new top diplomat by executive decree.
The speed of the handover signalled that this was a planned move rather than a sudden crisis, with the successor lined up before the resignation was even public.
In her letter she also offered a defence of her record, arguing that Ecuador had recovered its standing and credibility on the world stage during her time in office.
She thanked the ministry’s staff, the diplomatic corps and the international bodies based in the country, closing on a note of confidence in the government she was leaving.
The reason behind the reason
The health explanation was the one she gave, but it sits alongside a clear political motive. Just days earlier, the governing movement had named Sommerfeld as its candidate for mayor of Quito.
Under Ecuadorian rules, ministers and other senior officials who want to stand for election must leave their posts before formally registering. Her exit fits squarely into that pre-campaign window.
That makes the resignation less a retreat than a repositioning. The mayoralty of the capital is one of the most powerful elected offices in the country, and a major prize for the ruling bloc.
Both readings can be true at once. Officials offered the personal framing, while the electoral calendar supplies the practical trigger, and readers can weigh the two for themselves.
The candidacy itself is a notable bet by the governing movement. Putting a sitting minister forward for the capital suggests the bloc sees Quito as winnable and worth a recognisable name.
A reshuffle, not a one-off
The move does not stand alone. It comes as the Noboa government carries out a broader reorganisation of the executive, including the reduction and merging of several ministries.
Shifting the telecommunications minister straight into the foreign ministry is part of that reshaping, keeping experienced figures in play while trimming the overall structure of government.
For a president midway through a term, a tidy cabinet change that also frees an ally to chase a major mayoralty is a useful piece of political housekeeping.
It also tests the depth of the government’s bench. Moving a minister sideways into one of the most demanding portfolios assumes there is someone ready to backfill the role left behind.
What changes for Ecuador’s diplomacy
Sommerfeld had run the foreign ministry since 2023, making her one of the most visible faces of Noboa’s government abroad through a turbulent period for the country.
In her farewell she pointed to new embassies, expanded consular services and a push to position Ecuador’s fight against organised crime as a foreign-policy priority.
The government echoed that, crediting her with widening cooperation with allied countries and raising the country’s profile in regional and global forums.
Her tenure was not without strain. Ecuador’s foreign relations have been tested in recent years by disputes with neighbours and by the spillover of its domestic security crisis into diplomacy.
For Kury, the task is continuity on those fronts, above all the security agenda, while the country watches whether his predecessor’s next campaign reshapes politics in the capital.
For now the transition looks smooth on paper. The harder questions, about both the new minister’s grip on the brief and the former one’s electoral fortunes, will play out over the months ahead.
The change also arrives at a sensitive moment, with Ecuador in the global spotlight for its World Cup campaign and keen to project stability to the outside world.
A clean, fast handover helps that image, and whether it reads as routine renewal or as churn at the top will depend on how the wider reshuffle settles.
Frequently asked questions
Why did Ecuador’s foreign minister resign?
Gabriela Sommerfeld cited personal and health reasons, but she had just been named her party’s candidate for mayor of Quito, and Ecuadorian law requires ministers to step down before running.
Who replaced her?
President Daniel Noboa named Roberto Kury, previously the telecommunications minister, as the new foreign minister by executive decree the same night.
How long had she served?
Since 2023, when Noboa first took office, making her one of the most visible figures of his government on the international stage.
Is this part of a bigger change?
Yes. It comes amid a wider reorganisation of the Noboa government that includes reducing and merging several ministries.
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