José Sarney

His Excellency
José Sarney
31st President of Brazil
In office
April 21, 1985  March 15, 1990
Vice President None
Preceded by João Figueiredo
Succeeded by Fernando Collor de Mello
20th Vice President of Brazil
In office
March 15, 1985  April 21, 1985
Acting President: March 15, 1985 – April 21, 1985
President Tancredo Neves (elect)
Preceded by Aureliano Chaves
Succeeded by Itamar Franco
President of the Federal Senate
In office
February 2, 2009  February 1, 2013
Preceded by Garibaldi Alves Filho
Succeeded by Renan Calheiros
In office
February 1, 2003  February 14, 2005
Preceded by Ramez Tebet
Succeeded by Renan Calheiros
In office
February 2, 1995  February 4, 1997
Preceded by Humberto Lucena
Succeeded by Antônio Carlos Magalhães
Senator for Amapá
In office
February 1, 1991  February 1, 2015
Senator for Maranhão
In office
February 1, 1971  March 15, 1985
48th Governor of Maranhão
In office
January 31, 1966  May 14, 1970
Vice Governor Antônio Dino
Preceded by Newton Bello
Succeeded by Antônio Dino
Federal Deputy for Maranhão
In office
June 6, 1955  January 31, 1966
Personal details
Born José Ribamar Ferreira de Araújo Costa
(1930-04-24) April 24, 1930
Pinheiro, Maranhão, Brazil
Political party UDN (1955–1965)
ARENA (1965–1979)
PDS (1979–1985)
PFL (1985)
PMDB (1985–2017)
MDB (2017–present)
Spouse(s)
Marly Macieira (m. 1952)
Children Roseana Sarney (b. 1953)
Fernando Sarney (b. 1955)
José Sarney Filho (b. 1957)
Alma mater Federal University of Maranhão (UFMA)
Signature

José Sarney de Araújo Costa (Portuguese pronunciation: [ʒuˈzɛ saʁˈnej dʒi aɾaˈuʒu ˈkɔstɐ]; born April 24, 1930 as José Ribamar Ferreira de Araújo Costa) is a Brazilian politician, lawyer, and writer who served as 31st President of Brazil from March 15, 1985 to March 15, 1990.[1] At age 88, he is the oldest living former Brazilian president, and, as of the death of João Figueiredo in 1999, the only living former president not elected by direct vote.

Sarney ascended in the politics of his home state of Maranhão as part of the "Bossa Nova Generation" of UDN politicians in the 1950s, young idealists seeking to reorganize public administration and rid the government of corruption and old deleterious practices. During the Brazilian military dictatorship, which imposed a two-party system, Sarney affiliated himself with the government party, ARENA, becoming the president of the party in 1979. As the regime fell, however, ARENA split over the appointment of Paulo Maluf as its presidential candidate. Sarney joined the dissenters, and was instrumental in the creation of the Liberal Front Party. He agreed to run for Vice-President on the ticket of Tancredo Neves of PMDB, formerly the opposition party to the military government. Neves won the presidential election, but fell ill and died before taking office, and Sarney became President. He started out his term with great popularity, but public opinion shifted with the Brazilian debt crisis and the failure of Plano Cruzado to abate chronic inflation.

Over time, Sarney and his family acquired enormous clout over Maranhão's public life, and he is today regarded as the foremost of Brazil's oligarchs. Sarney owns the most important newspapers and TV stations in Maranhão, and remains influential there. Sarney has also faced multiple allegations of nepotism and corruption in his career. In 2009, the British weekly The Economist called his election as President of the Senate "a victory for semi-feudalism" and "a throwback to an era of semi-feudal politics that still prevails in corners of Brazil and holds the rest of it back."[2] Veja columnist Roberto Pompeu de Toledo deemed him "the perfect oligarch".[3]

Sarney is also an accomplished writer, and a member of the Brazilian Academy of Letters.

Early life

Born in Pinheiro, Maranhão, as José Ribamar Ferreira de Araújo Costa, he was the son of Sarney de Araújo Costa, a wealthy land-owner and sugarcane producer, and Kiola Ferreira. In 1965 he legally adopted the name José Sarney de Araújo Costa, usually shortened to José Sarney ([ʒʊˈzɛ saɦˈnej]), for electoral purposes, since he was known as "Zé do Sarney", as in "José, son of Sarney".

Personal life

Married to Marly (née Macieira), his children are Congressman José Sarney Filho, Governor Roseana Sarney, and the businessman Fernando Sarney.

Political career

Sarney started his political career as a federal deputy in 1955. He was a member of the centre-right National Democratic Union (União Democrática Nacional—UDN), aligned with the progressive wing of the party. He strongly supported so-called "Revolution of 1964", a military coup that overthrew leftist President João Goulart in 1964.[4] After the military coup, Sarney followed most of the UDN into the National Renewal Alliance (ARENA), the political party of the military government. He was elected governor of the state of Maranhão in 1966, serving until 1971. He was then elected to the Brazilian Senate and became ARENA's president.

Despite his support for the government's heavy-handed measures against dissent, Sarney had never been quite accepted by the military establishment, which tried to block his career. In 1979 ARENA reorganized as the Democratic Social Party (PDS), and Sarney remained the party's president. In 1984, the junta was under pressure due to popular protests to reinstate direct elections for president (Diretas Já movement). PDS was divided but launched Paulo Maluf as its candidate for the presidency in indirect elections. Sarney disagreed with this decision and left PDS to form the Liberal Front Party, which then allied with the PMDB. As part of the deal, Sarney became Tancredo Neves' running mate on the opposition ticket. Neves won the election of 15 January 1985, but became gravely ill the night before his inauguration. Sarney assumed office as vice-president and acting president until Neves died on 21 April, and he formally became the first civilian president in 21 years.

Sarney takes the oath of office as Vice President of Brazil on March 15, 1985, immediately becoming Acting President
President Sarney with U.S. President Ronald Reagan and Pelé during a state dinner at the White House, 1986

His succession raised some question because as Neves could not attend the inauguration ceremony on March 15, several politicians contended at the time that Sarney should not have been inaugurated as vice-president and allowed to become acting president. They believed that Sarney had been elected vice-president only by virtue of the election of his running mate as president. Each member of the Electoral College cast one vote, for president, and the choice of president carried with it the automatic selection of the ticket's running mate as vice-president, Sarney could take office only as vice-president together with Neves, they said. They argued that in the event of the head of the presidential ticket not being able to assume office, the presidential powers and duties should pass to the speaker of the Chamber of Deputies, Ulysses Guimarães.[4] There was some partisanship in this line of thought since both Neves and Guimarães were members of the same party, and Sarney was not; he had been a supporter of the military, and only recently had joined the coalition to defeat the military's candidate in the electoral college. The challenge to Sarney's inauguration was short-lived, however, because in the early hours of inauguration day, Guimarães himself stated that he believed that Sarney had the right to be inaugurated even without Neves, as the role of the vice-president was precisely that of replacing the president when needed.

Sarney and the president of Argentina, Raúl Alfonsín, started the process of creating a common market between the two nations in 1985. As first steps, they agreed to subsidize regional trade with a special currency for the purpose (the Gaucho). The agreement led to the formation of the Mercosur in 1991. He also oversaw constitutional amendments that purged the remaining vestiges of authoritarianism from the 1967/1969 Constitution.

He faced many problems: enormous foreign debt, rampant inflation and corruption as well as the transition to democracy. Sarney launched an economic plan to stabilize the economy, called "Plano Cruzado", successful at first. But the inflation became got worse than ever after a year. A new, fully democratic constitution was promulgated in 1988, and in the following year, the first direct elections since 1960 were held. Sarney was barred from running for president in his own right in that election. In Brazil, when a vice president serves part of a president's term —including when the president is abroad— it counts as a full term. At the time, the Constitution barred a president from immediate reelection.

He supported Fernando Henrique Cardoso as presidential candidate in 1994 and 1998 and Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva in 2002. He returned to the Senate after his presidency, this time representing Amapá, and served as President of the Senate from 1995 to 1997, 2003 to 2005, 2009 to 2011, and 2011 to 2013.[5] He retired in 2015, having served in elected office for all but a few months since of his life since 1955. When he retired, he was the longest-serving member of the Brazilian Congress.

Sérgio Machado, former president of Transpetro, said in his plea agreement within the Operation Car Wash that José Sarney received R$18.5 million of the bribe money from a Petrobras subsidiary, in the PMDB account during the period in which he directed the company (2003-2015).[6]

Writing

As a writer, his best known work is the Criollismo novel Os Marimbondos de Fogo ("The Fire Wasps"). Sarney was elected to a chair in the Brazilian Academy of Letters in 1980.

References

    1. Brooke, James (March 13, 1990). "In Brazil, Scathing Criticism For the Departing President". The New York Times. Retrieved July 1, 2010.
    2. "Where dinosaurs still roam", The Economist, February 5, 2009.
    3. VejaO oligarca perfeito Archived 15 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
    4. 1 2 http://countrystudies.us/brazil/95.htm
    5. Presidentes do Senado Federal - Nova República Jan 22, 2013
    6. "Sérgio Machado relata repasse de R$ 18,5 milhões a Sarney" (in Portuguese). Revista Exame. Retrieved June 15, 2016.

    See also

    Political offices
    Preceded by
    Newton Bello
    Governor of Maranhão
    1966–1970
    Succeeded by
    Antônio Dino
    Preceded by
    Aureliano Chaves
    Vice President of Brazil
    1985
    Succeeded by
    Itamar Franco
    Preceded by
    João Figueiredo
    President of Brazil
    March 15, 1985 – March 15, 1990
    Succeeded by
    Fernando Collor
    Preceded by
    Humberto Lucena
    President of the Federal Senate
    1995–1997
    2003–2005
    2009–2013
    Succeeded by
    Antônio Carlos Magalhães
    Preceded by
    Ramez Tebet
    Succeeded by
    Renan Calheiros
    Preceded by
    Garibaldi Alves Filho
    Academic offices
    Preceded by
    José Américo de Almeida
    6th Academic of the 38th chair of the
    Brazilian Academy of Letters

    November 6, 1980–present
    Incumbent
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