Alfredo de Sá Cardoso

Alfredo Ernesto de Sá Cardoso (June 6, 1864 – April 24, 1950), commonly known as Alfredo de Sá Cardoso (Portuguese pronunciation: [aɫˈfɾedu eɾˈnɛʃtu dɨ ˈsa kɐɾˈdozu]), or just Sá Cardoso, was a Portuguese republican politician of the Portuguese First Republic who served twice as Prime Minister of Portugal.

Alfredo de Sá Cardoso
72nd Prime Minister of Portugal
(18h of the Republic)
In office
June 29, 1919 – January 15, 1920  January 15, 1920 – January 21, 1920 1
PresidentAntónio José de Almeida
Preceded byDomingos Pereira
Succeeded byDomingos Pereira
Minister for Interior
In office
June 29, 1919 – January 15, 1920  January 15, 1920 – January 21, 1920 1
Prime MinisterHimself
Preceded byDomingos Pereira
Succeeded byDomingos Pereira
Minister for Interior
In office
December 18, 1923  July 6, 1924
Prime MinisterÁlvaro de Castro
Preceded byAntónio Ginestal Machado
Succeeded byAlfredo Rodrigues Gaspar
Personal details
Born(1864-06-06)June 6, 1864
Lisbon, Kingdom of Portugal
DiedApril 24, 1950(1950-04-24) (aged 85)
Lisbon, Portuguese Republic
Political partyPortuguese Republican Party
(later Reconstitution Party)
OccupationArmy officer (General)
Nickname(s)Alaíde (masonry name)
1 He resigned on January 15, 1920. Francisco José Fernandes Costa was chosen to replace him as President of the Ministry. He did not take office due to public protests. Sá Cardoso was then reinstated until January 21, 1920.

Life and politics

Born in Lisbon, Sá Cardoso was the son of Adelaide Leopoldina de Sá Cardoso. He entered the Colégio Militar and then the Escola do Exército, where his studies focused on artillery. He became an officer of the army and began a decades-long career that would eventually seem him promoted to the rank of general. In 1988, he was mobilized in the Luanda military campaign, occupying the post of secretary of the district government and governor of the fortress of São Paulo de Luanda, and from 1917 to 1918, he was integrated in the Portuguese Expeditionary Corps. He also served as a vogal of the Council for Ballistic Works.

He became a Freemason in 1893, being initiated in the Portugal Lodge with the symbolic name of Alaíde, ascending to the 33rd degree, and being part of its Supreme Council since 1934.

He was a member of the Portuguese Republican Party, a member of the respective Consultative Junta in 1913, and chief of the party in 1919. He founded the Reconstitution Party with Álvaro de Castro, and served as president of Republican Action, of which he was president. He was an active participant in the republican campaign, since the days of the Portuguese Constitutional Monarchy, taking part in the events of January 31, 1890, and January 28, 1908.

He integrated the Military Committee for the proclamation of the Portuguese Republic and was active in the 1910 revolution. With the republican triumph, he was a cabinet chief of Correia Barreto (1910–1911) and then Civil Governor of the Autonomous District of Funchal 1913–1914. Being a member of the so-called group Jovem Turquia (Young Turkey), he co-organized the 1915 revolutionary movement.

He took part in the resistance against the revolt of Sidónio Pais of December 5, 1917, being imprisoned between 1918 and 1919. In this last years, faithful to his republican beliefs, he participated in the offensive against the Monarchy of the North. He served as deputy, for Viana do Castelo, in 1913, 1915, 1919 and 1922, presiding the Chamber of Deputies in the last.

He became President of the Ministry on June 29, 1919, and served for almost a year until January 15, 1920. On the same day Francisco José Fernandes Costa was taking office, but due to the political instability of the First Republic, he was forced to resign during the same day (his government was called the "Five Minutes' Government"). Sá Cardoso was invited again to form government and he was Prime Minister again from January 16 to 21, 1920, accumulating the Interior (same period) and Foreign Affairs (from June 29 to July 12, 1919). He would participate in another government (of Álvaro de Castro) occupying the post of Minister of Interior between December 18, 1923 and July 6, 1924.

With the 1926 revolution that installed the Ditadura Nacional, a military dictatorial administration that would be followed by António de Oliveira Salazar's authoritarian Estado Novo, Alfredo de Sá Cardoso was again arrested in 1926, and forced to live in a regime of fixed residence, first in Cape Verde and then in the Azores, between 1927 and 1933.

He returned to mainland Portugal in 1934 to found the Republican Alliance. Until the end of his life he refused any political post. He married Gabriel Moreira. He died in Lisbon on April 24, 1950.

References

  • Guinote et al., Ministros e Parlamentares da 1.ª Republica (Ministers and Parliamentarians of the 1st Republic), Assembleia da República (Assembly of the Republic), Lisbon, 1991.
Political offices
Preceded by
Joaquim Pimenta de Castro
Prime Minister of Portugal
(President of the Ministry)
together with:
José Norton de Matos
António Maria da Silva
José de Freitas Ribeiro
Álvaro de Castro

1920
Succeeded by
João Chagas (didn't take office)
José de Castro
Preceded by
Domingos Leite Pereira
Prime Minister of Portugal
(President of the Ministry)

1919–1920
Succeeded by
Francisco José Fernandes Costa
Preceded by
Francisco José Fernandes Costa
Prime Minister of Portugal
(President of the Ministry)

1920
Succeeded by
Domingos Leite Pereira
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