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Liberal Alliance Aliança Liberal | |
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Leader | Getúlio Vargas João Pessoa |
Founded | 1929 |
Dissolved | 19 March 1930 |
Ideology | Nationalism Liberalism Anti-Milk coffee politics |
Political position | Centre to Centre-right |
The Liberal Alliance was a political alliance in Brazil made at the beginning of August 1929 on the initiative of political leaders from Minas Gerais and Rio Grande do Sul with the intention of support the candidacies of Getúlio Vargas and João Pessoa for the presidency and vice-presidency in the elections of March 1, 1930, in opposition to Júlio Prestes, the governor of São Paulo and the president Washington Luís. [1]
In the elections of March 1, 1930, the then São Paulo-born president Washington Luís launched the candidacy of also São Paulo-born Júlio Prestes. His choice aimed to ensure the continuity of the economic and financial policy, of austerity and containment of resources for coffee farming, at the same time as it represented a break in the traditional relay between São Paulo and Minas Gerais in the presidency. Feeling left out, the candidate from Minas Gerais, Antônio Carlos Ribeiro de Andrada, sought support from Rio Grande do Sul. After intense negotiations between the end of 1928 and July 1929, on July 30, the executive committee of the Republican Party of Minas Gerais launched the candidacies of Getúlio Vargas and João Pessoa for the presidency and vice-presidency respectively. [1]
The following day, the Liberator Party, from Rio Grande do Sul, joining the Rio-grandense Republican Party in the Gaúcho United Front, gave support for the opposition ticket. Aiming to make its action more concrete, the opposition formed, at the beginning of August, the Liberal Alliance under the leadership of Minas Gerais Afonso Pena Júnior (president) and Gaucho Ildefonso Simões Lopes (vice-president). In addition to Minas Gerais, Rio Grande do Sul and Paraíba, the Liberal Alliance received support from all state oppositions, especially the Democratic Party of São Paulo and the Democratic Party of the Federal District. [1]
On September 20, at a convention held in Rio de Janeiro, the Liberal Alliance approved the Vargas-Pessoa ticket and its electoral platform, written by the Gaucho republican Lindolfo Collor. Establishing political reform as essential, he defended popular representation through secret voting, Electoral Justice, the independence of the Judiciary, amnesty for revolutionaries of 1922, 1924 and 1925–27 and the adoption of protectionist economic measures for export products other than coffee. It also advocated measures to protect workers, such as the extension of the right to retirement, the application of the vacation law and the regulation of the work of minors and women. In the same year, a more radical current, formed by young politicians such as João Neves da Fontoura, Oswaldo Aranha and Virgílio de Melo Franco, began to admit the hypothesis of triggering an armed movement in the event of defeat at the polls. As a first step, they sought the collaboration of tenentists . These negotiations took place with great difficulty due to mutual distrust, as the Alliance included some of the lieutenants' main adversaries, especially Artur Bernardes, Epitácio Pessoa and João Pessoa.
Artur da Silva Bernardes was a Brazilian lawyer and politician who served the 12th president of Brazil from 1922 to 1926. Bernades' presidency was marked by the crisis of the First Brazilian Republic and the almost uninterrupted duration of a state of emergency. During his long political career, from 1905 until his death, he was the main leader of the Republican Party of Minas Gerais (PRM) from 1918–1922 until the party's closure in 1937, and founder and leader of the Republican Party (PR).
Washington Luís Pereira de Sousa was a Brazilian politician who served as the 13th president of Brazil. Elected governor of São Paulo state in 1920 and president of Brazil in 1926, Washington Luís belonged to the Republican Party of São Paulo (PRP) and served as the last president of the First Brazilian Republic.
The Revolution of 1930 was an armed insurrection across Brazil that ended the Old Republic. The revolution replaced incumbent president Washington Luís with defeated presidential candidate and revolutionary leader Getúlio Vargas, concluding the political hegemony of a four-decade-old oligarchy and beginning the Vargas Era.
The Constitutionalist Revolution of 1932 is the name given to the uprising of the population of the Brazilian state of São Paulo against the Brazilian Revolution of 1930 when Getúlio Vargas assumed the nation's presidency; Vargas was supported by the people, the military and the political elites of Minas Gerais, Rio Grande do Sul and Paraíba. The movement grew out of local resentment from the fact that Vargas ruled by decree, unbound by a Constitution, in a provisional government. The 1930 Revolution also affected São Paulo by eroding the autonomy that states enjoyed during the term of the 1891 Constitution and preventing the inauguration of the governor of São Paulo, Júlio Prestes, who had been elected president of Brazil in 1930, while simultaneously overthrowing President Washington Luís, who was governor of São Paulo from 1920 to 1924. These events marked the end of the First Brazilian Republic.
The Paulista Republican Party was a Brazilian political party founded on April 18, 1873 during the Itu Convention and sparked the first modern republican movement in Brazil.
The South Is My Country is a separatist movement that seeks the independence of Brazil's South Region, formed by the states of Paraná, Rio Grande do Sul, and Santa Catarina. The group claims the region is under-represented by Brasília.
General elections were held in Brazil on 2 December 1945, the first since the establishment of Getúlio Vargas' Estado Novo. The presidential elections were won by Eurico Gaspar Dutra of the Social Democratic Party (PSD), whilst the PSD also won a majority of seats in both the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate. Voter turnout was 83% in the presidential election, 81% in the Chamber elections and 73% in the Senate elections.
General elections were held in Brazil on 3 October 1950. The presidential elections were won by Getúlio Vargas of the Brazilian Labour Party, whilst the Social Democratic Party remained the largest party in both the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate, although they lost their majority in the former. Voter turnout was 72.1% in the presidential election, 72.0% in the Chamber elections and 77.7% in the Senate elections.
Getúlio Dornelles Vargas was a Brazilian lawyer and politician who served as the 14th and 17th president of Brazil, from 1930 to 1945 and from 1951 until his suicide in 1954. Due to his long and controversial tenure as Brazil's provisional, constitutional, dictatorial and democratic leader, he is considered by historians as the most influential Brazilian politician of the 20th century.
Presidential elections were held in Brazil on 3 October 1955. The result was a victory for Juscelino Kubitschek, who received 35.7% of the vote. Voter turnout was 59.7%.
The Gaúcho United Front was a coalition of two political parties in the Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul which formed shortly after Getúlio Vargas became governor. It was composed of the Riograndese Republican Party, led by Borges de Medeiros, and the Liberator Party, led by Joaquim Francisco de Assis Brasil.
The Brazilian military junta of 1930, also known as the Pacification Junta, seized power during the Revolution of 1930 and governed Brazil from 24 October to 3 November 1930, when the junta leaders handed power over to revolutionary leader Getúlio Vargas.
Events in the year 1928 in Brazil.
Events in the year 1929 in Brazil.
Events in the year 1930 in Brazil.
Events in the year 1937 in Brazil.
Events in the year 1942 in Brazil.
José Joaquim Cardoso de Melo Neto was a Brazilian lawyer, professor and politician.
The presidency of Washington Luís in Brazil began on 15 November 1926, after he won the 1926 presidential election, the 13th presidential election held in Brazil, becoming the 13th President of Brazil, and ended on 24 October 1930, when he was deposed by the military during the Revolution of 1930. Following the troubled presidency of Artur Bernardes, Washington Luís still had to deal with the tenentist movement, with the end of the Prestes Column, which had lasted since 1925, being a significant development.