The appointed Minister of Social Development, Victoria Tolosa Paz, was head of the list of national deputies of the Front of All for the province of Buenos Aires in the legislative elections last year and has extensive experience in public administration, especially in the social area.
The still legislator was part of this management since its inception, in December 2019, when she was appointed head of the National Council for the Coordination of Social Policiesarea in charge of the articulation of the different areas of the national State that implement social policies, whose objective is to improve and make more efficient the administration of resources.
Before that, in 2014, during the presidency of Cristina Fernández, it had joined the National Social Security Administration (Anses), as part of the Lot Generation with Services program within the framework of the Bicentennial Argentine Credit program for the Single Family Home (Procreate).
Militant of Peronism from La Plata (she was a councilor and later, in 2019, she competed in the Peronist internship in search of a candidacy for mayor), she had accompanied in 2012 the then governor of the province of Buenos Aires, Daniel Scioli, with the position of undersecretary of Social Urbanism of the Ministry of Social Development.
With a vast trajectory in the public sphere beginning in the late 1990s, also served on the Provincial Council for Family and Human Development, chaired by Hilda González de Duhalde; as advisor to the Coordination area of the Minister Unit in the Ministry of Social Development of the Nation (portfolio that now has to lead), and then as Regional head of the Participatory Fund for Social Investment (Fopar), in that same ministry, already in Nestor Kirchner’s presidency.
He also worked in the National Advisory Commission for the Integration of Persons with Disabilities (Conadis) of the Presidency, today the National Agency for Disability (Andis).
Born in 1973 into a radical middle-class family in La Plata, she graduated as an accountant from the Catholic University of La Plata, has 3 children and “one by heart.”
With constant militancy and participation in areas related to gender within Justicialism, on her personal website she makes it clear that she wants to be “the first female mayor of the city of La Plata.”
Meanwhile, on his social networks he has posted a publication of his last challenge, when he assumed his seat in Congress: “With pride and enormous responsibility I swear to represent the interests of the people of the province of Buenos Aires, and of all of Argentina, working on the necessary transformations that allow us to continue rebuilding our country,” he maintains in the post.