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Marcela Temer

Marcela Temer
Marcela Temer em 8 de março de 2017.jpg
First Lady of Brazil
Assumed office
31 August 2016
President Michel Temer
Preceded by Marisa Letícia Lula da Silva (2011)
Second Lady of Brazil
In office
1 January 2011 – 31 August 2016
President Dilma Rousseff
Preceded by Mariza Gomes da Silva
Succeeded by Position vacant
Personal details
Born Marcela Tedeschi Araújo
(1983-05-16) May 16, 1983 (age 34)
Paulínia, São Paulo, Brazil
Nationality Brazilian
Political party PMDB
Spouse(s) Michel Temer (m. 2003)
Children Michel
Residence Alvorada Palace
Alma mater FADISP

Marcela Tedeschi de Araújo Temer (born May 16, 1983) is the current First Lady of Brazil, married to President Michel Temer.

Marcela Tedeschi Araújo was born on May 16, 1983 in Paulínia, São Paulo, to Carlos Antônio de Araújo and Norma Tedeschi. After graduating from the Escola Estadual Porphyrio da Paz, in her native Paulínia, Marcela worked as a receptionist for the newspaper O Momento. In 2002, at the age of nineteen, she won the title of Miss Paulínia, then moving on to share the state title as Miss São Paulo.

In 2002, Marcela accompanied her uncle Geraldo, a Paulínia municipal employee to the annual political convention of the Brazilian Democratic Movement Party (PMDB). While there, Marcela met Michel Temer, a politician forty-three years her senior. The couple married on July 26, 2003, in a small ceremony.

In 2009, Marcela graduated with a law degree from Fadisp, a private school in São Paulo. In an interview, Marcela says that she never took the licensing exam because of the birth of the couple's son Michelzinho.

During the recent economic crisis, Brazilian and foreign media have criticized Marcela Temer's spending habits, characterizing her foreign trips, extensive remodeling of the executive residence, and money spent on clothing as excessive.

On May 12, 2016, Brazilian police arrested three people for attempting to extort money from Marcela after they hacked her personal internet account.

The conservative Brazilian weekly magazine Veja featured a profile of Marcela Temer in their April 18, 2016 issue. The title, "Bela, recatada, e 'do lar'" (translated as "beautiful, demure, and a housewife") portrayed Marcela as a feminine helpmeet. Almost immediately, Brazilian feminists outraged by the transition from the country's first female president Dilma Rousseff to a more conservative government responded on social media by posting memes of themselves that questioned Marcela as a role model for Brazilian womanhood.


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