Rosario Murillo and the Fate of Nicaragua

Rosario Murillo is one of the most consequential figures in contemporary Nicaraguan politics. In this fascinating and deeply researched work, feminist political scientist Karen Kampwirth traces Murillo’s transformation from young mother, poet, and Sandinista militant to revolutionary first lady and, ultimately, authoritarian copresident with her husband Daniel Ortega. Situating Murillo within Nicaragua’s turbulent political history, Kampwirth offers a compelling narrative of gender, power, and cruel ambition.
Florence E. Babb, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Murillo has been first lady of Nicaragua twice (1985-1990 and 2007-2017), vice president (2017-2025), and co-president (since February 2025). She also is a published poet who has been involved with revolutionary and establishment politics since the late 1960s. With her husband, Daniel Ortega, Murillo has been an important figure in the Sandinista movement that overthrew the Somoza dictatorship and fought the Contra War. Particularly since returning to power in the twenty-first century, Ortega and Murillo have dispensed with any pretense of democratic socialism and have become increasingly authoritarian. Kampwirth draws on interviews with those close to Murillo as well as her own words to draw a portrait of a woman who arguably has betrayed her principles and sacrificed intimate relationships, motherhood, and familial ties to advance her own ambitions for power.

about the author

Karen Kampwirth

Karen Kampwirth is the Robert Murphy Chair and Professor of Political Science at Knox College. She is the author of three other books and the editor of two.

learn more
Karen Kampwirth