Patricia Escobar
First Lady of Guatemala
In role
14 January 1996  14 January 2000
PresidentÁlvaro Arzú
Preceded byMaría Eugenia Morales
Succeeded byEvelyn Morataya
First Lady of the Guatemala City
In role
15 January 2000  27 April 2018
Preceded byWendy Widmann
Succeeded byDominique Wilson Arzú
In role
15 January 1986  30 June 1990
Succeeded byWendy Widmann
Personal details
Born (1953-10-03) October 3, 1953
San Salvador
Nationality Guatemala
 El Salvador
Political partyUnionist Party
SpouseÁlvaro Arzú (1965–2018 his death)
Alma materRafael Landívar University

Patricia Escobar de Arzú (born October 3, 1953), also known as Patricia de Arzú, is a Salvadoran-Guatemalan entrepreneur and politician. She is the widow of former president of Guatemala and mayor of Guatemala City, Álvaro Arzú Irigoyen, having served as First Lady of Guatemala from January 14, 1996, to January 14, 2000, and as First Lady of Guatemala City from 1991 to 1996, and again from 2004 until his death in 2018. She was an unsuccessful presidential candidate in the 2011 elections for the Unionist Party.[1]

Biography

Arzú was born on October 3, 1953, San Salvador. She married Álvaro Arzú Irigoyen, with whom she had four children: María Andrée, Roberto Manuel, Alvaro, and Isabel. She has 11 grandchildren.

She graduated as a secretary in San Salvador. She studied business administration at the Broward Community School in Florida, United States, and philosophy at Rafael Landívar University in Guatemala. Her interest in improving the conditions for the most vulnerable in Guatemalan society has made her one of the best-known female entrepreneurs in Guatemala. In 1987, she was the founder and general coordinator of the Secretariat of Social Affairs of the Municipality of Guatemala, allowing her to create three children's gardens that continue offering services after 20 years.[2]

Arzú ran as a candidate for president in the 2011 elections. She was 8th out of 10 candidates, with 97,277 votes, representing 2.19% of the total votes.[3] She is the mother of politician Álvaro Arzú Escobar, former president of the Congress.

References

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