Teresa Caeiro | |
Office: | Vice President of the Assembly of the Republic |
Term Start: | 15 October 2009 |
Term End: | 25 October 2019 |
President: | Jaime Gama Assunção Esteves Eduardo Ferro Rodrigues |
Term Start1: | 28 October 2015 |
Term End1: | 25 October 2019 |
Constituency1: | Faro |
Term Start2: | 15 October 2009 |
Term End2: | 28 October 2015 |
Constituency2: | Lisbon |
Term Start3: | 10 March 2005 |
Term End3: | 15 October 2009 |
Constituency3: | Leiria |
Term Start4: | 4 April 2002 |
Term End4: | 12 September 2003 |
Constituency4: | Lisbon |
Office5: | Secretary of State for Arts and Performances |
Primeminister5: | Pedro Santana Lopes |
Term Start5: | 17 July 2004 |
Term End5: | 10 March 2005 |
Office6: | Secretary of State for Social Security |
Term Start6: | 12 September 2003 |
Term End6: | 17 July 2004 |
Primeminister6: | José Durão Barroso |
Birth Name: | Teresa Margarida de Figueiredo de Vasconcelos Caeiro |
Birth Date: | 14 February 1969 |
Birth Place: | Lisbon, Portugal |
Children: | One son |
Teresa Caeiro (born 1969) is a Portuguese lawyer and politician.
Teresa Margarida de Figueiredo de Vasconcelos Caeiro was born in the Portuguese capital of Lisbon on 14 February 1969. She was the daughter and granddaughter of naval officers, her father being a rear admiral and his father an admiral. As a child she lived in several countries, including Cape Verde and Belgium, where she lived between the ages of 9 and 19, following her father in his work. She graduated in law from the Faculty of Law of the University of Lisbon, and did an internship at a legal company between 1993 and 1995. Then she worked as a freelance translator at the Court of Justice of the European Union and at the European General Court from 1996 to 1999. Between 1998 and 1999, she was also a lawyer at Portugália Airlines.[1] [2] [3]
A member of the Christian democratic CDS – People's Party (CDS-PP), Caeiro had her first active political experience as a member of the parish assembly of Mercês in Lisbon, between 1997 and 2001. In the late 1990s she was asked to be the legal advisor to the parliamentary group of the CDS-PP, in the Assembly of the Republic. She later became the chief of staff for the same CDS-PP parliamentary group.[1] [2]
In the 2002 legislative elections the CDS-PP included Caeiro on the Lisbon constituency list of candidates to be a deputy in the Assembly of the Republic. Although she was elected, she did not take office as she was appointed to the post of civil governor of Lisbon, on 14 May 2002. In September 2003, however, she left the post in Lisbon to become Secretary of State for Social Security in the coalition government of the Social Democratic Party and CDS-PP, under the prime minister José Manuel Barroso. In 2004, under the new prime minister, Pedro Santana Lopes, she was appointed Secretary of State for Arts and Performances. In 2005 she was again elected to the National Assembly as a candidate on the CDS-PP list for the Leiria constituency. She was re-elected in 2009 and 2011, for the Lisbon constituency and again in 2015, for the Faro constituency.[1] [2] Caeiro was involved with a charitable organization called Raríssimas, that aimed to help people with rare mental illnesses. In 2019, the founder and president was taken to court by the charity to obtain repayment of over €380,000 of funds, said to have been used inappropriately. Caeiro had been a member of the governing body at the time, although the extent of her actual involvement with the charity was disputed.[4] [5]
Caeiro became an unmarried mother at the age of 37, having a son with a professor, Vasco Rato. In 2011 she married the journalist and writer, Miguel Sousa Tavares, in what was his fourth marriage. They separated in September 2017.[3] [6]