President of Guatemala

The president of Guatemala (Spanish: Presidente de Guatemala), officially titled President of the Republic of Guatemala (Spanish: Presidente de la República de Guatemala), is the head of state and head of government of Guatemala, elected to a single four-year term. The position of President was created in 1839.

President of the
Republic of Guatemala
Presidente de la República de Guatemala
Incumbent
Alejandro Giammattei
since 14 January 2020
Office of the President of Guatemala
National Security Council
StyleMr. President
(informal)
Most Excellent Mr. President of the Republic
(official)
StatusHead of state
Head of government
Member ofCabinet
Residence Casa Crema
SeatGuatemala City
AppointerSupreme Electoral Court
Term lengthFour years
non-renewable
Constituting instrumentGuatemalan Constitution
Inaugural holderMariano Rivera Paz
FormationDecember 3, 1839 (1839-12-03)
DeputyVice President of Guatemala
Salary146,950 GTQ monthly
($18,863 as of May 2023)[1]
Websitewww.presidencia.gob.gt

Requirements to hold office

According to article 185 of the constitution, the following is required to be president:

  • A Guatemalan of origin who is a citizen in good standing.
  • 40 years of age.

Under article 186, relatives of the incumbent president or vice president are not allowed to run in the succeeding election.

Duties and competences

According to article 183 of the constitution, the following duties and competences are conferred to the president:

  • Comply with and enforce the Constitution and laws.
  • Provide the defense and security of the Nation, as well as the preservation of public order.
  • Exercise the command of the Armed Forces of Guatemala with all the respective functions and attributions.
  • Exercise the command of the National Police.
  • Approve, promulgate, execute and enforce laws.
  • Dictate the provisions that are necessary in cases of serious emergency or public calamity, having to report to the Congress in its immediate sessions.
  • Submit proposals of laws to the Congress.
  • Exercise the right of veto with respect to the laws issued by the Congress, except in cases in which it is not necessary to sanction the executive branch in accordance with the Constitution.
  • Present annually to the Congress, at the beginning of its session, written report on the general situation of the Republic and of the business of its administration carried out during the previous year.
  • Submit annually to the Congress, for approval with no less than one hundred and twenty days prior to the date on which the fiscal year begins, through the Ministry of Public Finance, the draft budget that contains in detail the income and expenditures of the State. If the Congress is not in session, it must hold extraordinary sessions to hear about the project.
  • Submit for consideration of the Congress for approval, and before ratification, treaties and conventions of international character and contracts and concessions on public services.
  • To summon the Legislative Organism to extraordinary sessions when the interests of the Republic demand it.
  • Coordinate the development policy of the Nation through the Council of Ministers.
  • Preside over the Council of Ministers and exercise the function of hierarchical superior of the officials and employees of the Executive Organism.
  • Maintain the territorial integrity and dignity of the Nation.
  • Direct foreign policy and international relations, pronounce, ratify and denounce treaties and agreements in accordance with the Constitution.
  • Receive the diplomatic representatives, as well as issue and withdraw the exequatur to the patents of the consuls.
  • Administer public finances in accordance with the law.
  • Exonerate of fines and surcharges to the taxpayers who have incurred in them for not covering the taxes within the legal terms for acts or omissions in the administrative order.
  • Appoint and remove ministers of state, deputy ministers, secretaries and undersecretaries of the presidency, ambassadors and other officials that correspond to it according to the law.
  • Grant premiums, pensions and subsidies in accordance with the Law.
  • Award decorations to Guatemalans and foreigners.
  • Within the fifteen days following its conclusion, inform the Congress about the purpose of any trip that has taken place outside the national territory and about the results thereof.
  • Submit every four months to the Congress through the respective ministry an analytical report on the budget execution, for its knowledge and control.
  • Exercise all other functions assigned by the Constitution or the law.

Heads of state of Guatemala within the Federal Republic of Central America (1824–1839)

No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term of office Political party
Took office Left office Time in office
1 Alejandro Diaz Cabeza de Vaca
(–)
Provisional
15 September 1824 12 October 1824 27 days Conservative
2 Juan Barrundia
(–)
12 October 1824 9 September 1826 1 year, 332 days Liberal
3 Cirilo Flores Estrada
(1779–1826)
Acting
9 September 1826 13 October 1826 34 days N/A
4 Jose Domingo Estrada
(–)
Acting
2 January 1827 1 March 1827 58 days Conservative
5 Mariano de Aycinena y Piñol
(1789–1855)
1 March 1827 12 April 1829 2 years, 42 days Conservative
6 Mario Zenteno
(–)
Provisional
13 April 1829 30 April 1829 17 days Conservative
7 Juan Francisco Barrundia y Cepeda
(–)
30 April 1829 23 August 1829 115 days Liberal
8 Pedro Molina Mazariegos
(1777–1854)
23 August 1829 10 February 1831 1 year, 171 days Liberal
9 José Gregorio Márquez
(–)
Acting
10 February 1831 28 August 1835 199 days N/A
10 Mariano Gálvez
(c.1794–1862)
28 August 1831 3 March 1838 6 years, 187 days Liberal
11 Pedro José Valenzuela y Jáuregui
(–)
Acting
3 March 1838 29 July 1838 148 days N/A
12 Mariano Rivera Paz
(1804–1849)
Acting
29 July 1838 30 January 1839 185 days Conservative
13 Carlos Salazar Castro
(1800–1867)
Provisional
30 January 1839 13 April 1839 73 days N/A
14 Mariano Rivera Paz
(1804–1849)
Acting
13 April 1839 3 December 1839 234 days Conservative

Presidents of independent Guatemala (1839–present)

Note: Regarding the numbering of the terms, several reliable sources state that Jimmy Morales is the 50th president[2][3][4]

No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Elected Term of office Political party
Took office Left office Time in office
1 Mariano Rivera Paz
(1804–1849)
3 December 1839 25 February 1842 2 years, 84 days Conservative
2 José Venancio López
(1791–1863)
Acting
25 February 1842 14 May 1842 78 days Independent
3 Mariano Rivera Paz
(1804–1849)
14 May 1842 14 December 1844 2 years, 214 days Conservative
4 Rafael Carrera
(1814–1865)
14 December 1844 16 August 1848 3 years, 246 days Conservative
5 Juan Antonio Martínez
(?–1854)
Acting
16 August 1848 28 November 1848 104 days Conservative
6 José Bernardo Escobar
(1797–1849)
Acting
28 November 1848 1 January 1849 34 days Conservative
7 Mariano Paredes
(1800–1856)
Acting
1 January 1849 6 November 1851 2 years, 309 days Independent
8 Rafael Carrera
(1814–1865)
6 November 1851 14 April 1865 13 years, 159 days Conservative
9 Pedro de Aycinena y Piñol
(1802–1897)
Acting
14 April 1865 24 May 1865 40 days Conservative
10 Vicente Cerna Sandoval
(1815–1885)
24 May 1865 29 June 1871 6 years, 36 days Conservative
11 Miguel García Granados
(1809–1878)
29 June 1871 4 June 1873 1 year, 340 days Liberal
12 Justo Rufino Barrios
(1835–1885)
1873
1880
4 June 1873 2 April 1885 11 years, 302 days Liberal
13 Alejandro M. Sinibaldi
(1825–1896)
Acting
2 April 1885 5 April 1885 3 days Liberal
14 Manuel Barillas
(1845–1907)
6 April 1885 15 March 1892 6 years, 345 days Liberal
15 José María Reina Barrios
(1854–1898)
1892 15 March 1892 8 February 1898 5 years, 330 days Liberal
16 Manuel Estrada Cabrera
(1857–1924)
1898
1904
1910
1916
8 February 1898 15 April 1920 22 years, 67 days Liberal
17 Carlos Herrera
(1856–1930)
1920 (Apr)
1920 (Aug)
15 April 1920 10 December 1921 1 year, 239 days Unionist Party
18 José María Orellana
(1872–1926)
1921
1922
10 December 1921 26 September 1926 4 years, 290 days Liberal
19 Lázaro Chacón González
(1873–1931)
1926 26 September 1926 12 December 1930 4 years, 77 days Unionist Party
Baudilio Palma
(1880–1930)
Acting
13 December 1930 17 December 1930 4 days Conservative
Manuel María Orellana Contreras
(1870–1940)
De facto
17 December 1930 2 January 1931 16 days Liberal
20 José María Reina Andrade
(1860–1947)
Acting
2 January 1931 14 February 1931 43 days Liberal
21 Jorge Ubico
(1878–1946)
1931 14 February 1931 1 July 1944 13 years, 138 days Progressive Liberal Party
22 Juan Federico Ponce Vaides
(1889–1956)
Acting
1 July 1944 20 October 1944 111 days Progressive Liberal Party
23 Revolutionary Government Junta 20 October 1944 15 March 1945 146 days Military
24 Juan José Arévalo
(1904–1990)
1944 15 March 1945 15 March 1951 6 years Revolutionary Action Party
25 Jacobo Árbenz
(1913–1971)
1950 15 March 1951 27 June 1954
(Deposed)
3 years, 104 days Revolutionary Action Party /
Party of the Guatemalan Revolution
26 Carlos Enrique Díaz de León
(1915–2014)
Provisional President
27 June 1954 29 June 1954 2 days Military
27 Elfego Hernán Monzón Aguirre
(1912–1981)
Chairman of Military Junta
29 June 1954 8 July 1954 9 days Military
28 Carlos Castillo Armas
(1914–1957)
1954 8 July 1954 26 July 1957 3 years, 18 days National Liberation Movement
29 Luis Arturo González López
(1900–1965)
Acting
27 July 1957 24 October 1957 89 days Independent
30 Óscar Mendoza Azurdia
(1917–1995)
Chairman of Military Junta
24 October 1957 26 October 1957 2 days Military
31 Guillermo Flores Avendaño
(1894–1982)
Acting
26 October 1957 2 March 1958 129 days Military
32 Miguel Ydígoras Fuentes
(1895–1982)
1958 2 March 1958 31 March 1963
(Deposed)
5 years, 29 days Military /
REDENCION
33 Enrique Peralta Azurdia
(1908–1997)
31 March 1963 1 July 1966 3 years, 92 days Institutional Democratic Party
34 Julio César Méndez Montenegro
(1915–1996)
1966 1 July 1966 1 July 1970 4 years Revolutionary Party
35 Carlos Manuel Arana Osorio
(1918–2003)
1970 1 July 1970 1 July 1974 4 years Institutional Democratic Party
36 Kjell Eugenio Laugerud García
(1930–2009)
1974 1 July 1974 1 July 1978 4 years Institutional Democratic Party
37 Fernando Romeo Lucas García
(1924–2006)
1978 1 July 1978 23 March 1982 3 years, 265 days Institutional Democratic Party
38 Efraín Ríos Montt
(1926–2018)
23 March 1982 8 August 1983 1 year, 138 days Military
39 Óscar Humberto Mejía Víctores
(1930–2016)
8 August 1983 14 January 1986 2 years, 159 days Military
40 Vinicio Cerezo
(born 1942)
1985 14 January 1986 14 January 1991 5 years Guatemalan Christian Democracy
41 Jorge Serrano Elías
(born 1945)
1990 14 January 1991 1 June 1993 2 years, 138 days Solidarity Action Movement
42 Gustavo Adolfo Espina Salguero
(born 1946)
Acting
1 June 1993 5 June 1993 4 days Solidarity Action Movement
43 Ramiro de León Carpio
(1942–2002)
1993 6 June 1993 14 January 1996 2 years, 222 days Independent
44 Álvaro Arzú
(1946–2018)
1995–1996 14 January 1996 14 January 2000 4 years National Advancement Party /
Unionist Party
45 Alfonso Portillo
(born 1951)
1999 14 January 2000 14 January 2004 4 years Guatemalan Republican Front
46 Óscar Berger
(born 1946)
2003 14 January 2004 14 January 2008 4 years National Solidarity Party /
Grand National Alliance
47 Álvaro Colom
(1951–2023)
2007 14 January 2008 14 January 2012 4 years National Unity of Hope
48 Otto Pérez Molina
(born 1950)
2011 14 January 2012 3 September 2015 3 years, 232 days Patriotic Party /
Grand National Alliance
49 Alejandro Maldonado
(born 1936)
Acting
3 September 2015 14 January 2016 133 days Independent
50 Jimmy Morales
(born 1969)
2015 14 January 2016 14 January 2020 4 years National Convergence Front
51 Alejandro Giammattei
(born 1956)
2019 14 January 2020 Incumbent
(Term ends on 14 January 2024)
3 years, 287 days Vamos
52 Bernardo Arévalo
(born 1958)
President-elect
2023 14 January 2024 −78 days Semilla

Latest election

CandidateRunning matePartyFirst roundSecond round
Votes%Votes%
Sandra TorresCarlos Raúl MoralesNational Unity of Hope1,112,93925.421,384,04442.05
Alejandro GiammatteiGuillermo Castillo ReyesVamos608,08313.891,907,76757.95
Edmond MuletJorge PérezHumanist Party of Guatemala493,71011.28
Thelma CabreraNeftalí LópezMovement for the Liberation of Peoples452,26010.33
Roberto ArzúJosé Antonio FariasNational Advancement PartyPodemos267,0496.10
Isaac FarchiRicardo Flores AsturiasVision with Values259,6165.93
Manuel VillacortaIzabel HernándezWinaq229,3625.24
Estuardo GaldámezBetty Marroquín SilvaNational Convergence Front180,4144.12
Julio Héctor EstradaYara ArguetaCommitment, Renewal and Order165,0313.77
Fredy CabreraRicardo SagastumeTodos138,3333.16
Amílcar RiveraErico Can SaquicVictory111,9982.56
Pablo CetoBlanca Estela ColopGuatemalan National Revolutionary Unity94,5312.16
Pablo DuarteRoberto VilledaUnionist Party62,6791.43
Manfredo MarroquínOscar Adolfo MoralesEncuentro por Guatemala50,5941.16
Aníbal GarcíaCarlos PérezLibre41,8000.95
Benito MoralesClaudia Mariana ValienteConvergence37,5790.86
Luis Velásquez QuiroaArturo SotoUnidos26,9210.61
José Luis Chea UrruelaMario Guillermo GonzálezProductivity and Work Party23,9620.55
Danilo RocaManuel MartínezAvanza21,4100.49
Total4,378,271100.003,291,811100.00
Valid votes4,378,27186.863,291,81194.68
Invalid/blank votes662,15213.14184,9475.32
Total votes5,040,423100.003,476,758100.00
Registered voters/turnout8,150,22161.848,150,22142.66
Source: TSE, TSE

Notes

    References

    1. Rony Ríos (17 January 2017). "Jimmy Morales el presidente mejor pagado de Latinoamérica". elPeriódico. Archived from the original on 19 January 2018. Retrieved 19 May 2018.
    2. "Jimmy Morales tomó la banda presidencial como el 50° Presidente de la República de Guatemala". TN23 (news station, original in video). 16 January 2016. Archived from the original on 12 December 2021. Retrieved 5 April 2019.
    3. "Jimmy Morales asume como nuevo presidente de Guatemala". CNN Español. 14 January 2016. Archived from the original on 4 February 2016. Retrieved 5 April 2019.
    4. Tulio Juárez (17 March 2017). "¿Qué le obsequiaría usted este sábado al presidente Jimmy Morales en su 48 cumpleaños?". elPeriódico. Archived from the original on 5 April 2019. Retrieved 5 April 2019.
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