| Office: | President of Brazil |
|---|---|
| Term in office: | November 3, 1930 – October 29, 1945 January 31, 1951–August 24, 1954 |
| Preceded by: | Tasso Fragoso (1930) Gaspar Dutra (1951) |
| Succeeded by: | José Linhares (1945) João Café Filho (1954) |
| Date of birth: | April 19, 1882 |
| Place of birth: | São Borja, Rio Grande do Sul |
| Date of death | August 24, 1954 |
| Place of death: | Rio de Janeiro |
| First Lady: | Darcy Vargas |
| Party: | PTB |
Getúlio Dornelles Vargas (pron. IPA : ; April 19, 1882 - August 24, 1954) was the president of Brazil from 1930 to 1945 and from 1950 to his suicide in 1954.
Bourgeois and military discontent, heightened by the Great Depression's impact on the Brazilian economy, led to bloodless coup d'état on October 24, 1930 that ousted President Washington Luís and his heir-apparent Júlio Prestes. Julio Prestes, at this point was the new elected president of Brazil, but the whole process was questioned, fraud denounced, and before the new president took office, the so called revolutionary movement started, joining the regional leaderships in several Brazilian states not satisfied with the political dominance exerted by the state of São Paulo at that point in time. Anticlimactic as it was, this was a watershed in Brazilian history — a liberal, bourgeois revolution that ushered out the political preeminence of the paulista coffee oligarchs. The military, traditionally active in Brazilian politics, installed Vargas as "provisional president." A populist governor of Rio Grande do Sul and the former presidential candidate of the Liberal Alliance, Vargas had been "defeated" by Prestes in a disputed election earlier that year.
Vargas was a wealthy pro-industrial nationalist and anti-communist who favored capitalist development and liberal reforms, but actually posed a serious threat to the elite paulista gentry. This opposition would later be radicalized in the 1932 movement that was, initially aimed at the establishment of a new constitution. Vargas's Liberal Alliance drew support from wide ranges of Brazil's burgeoning urban middle class and a group of tenentes, who had grown frustrated to some extent with the politics of coronelismo and café com leite.
Although Vargas ran strictly from within the partisan elite during this unsuccessful 1930 campaign on a populist and protectionist platform, the coup d'état laid the foundations of a modern Brazil that is highly industrialized, but still considered a part of the Third World.
However moderate these aims were, opposition arose among the powerful paulista coffee oligarchs who had grown accustomed to their domination of Brazilian politics. This opposition ignited the military movement of 1932 when the paulista elite was defeated, situation that marked the definitive transition from the Brazilian "old republic" and its entry in a new economic cycle not anymore focused in the coffee and other commodities production but in stimulating the industrial development. His tenuous coalition also lacked a coherent program, being committed to a broad vision of modernization, but little else more definitive. Having to balance such conflicting ideological constituencies, regionalism, and economic interests in such a vast, diverse, and socio-economically varied nation would, thus, not only explain the sole constancy that marked Vargas's long career — abrupt shifts in alliances and ideologies, but also his eventual dictatorship, modeled surprisingly along the lines of European Fascism, considering the liberal roots of his regime. Vargas, in effect, sought to forge a corporatist, centralized state along Fascist lines to mitigate these disparate class interests and to quell disorder during a chaotic interwar era.
Like Franklin Roosevelt, his first steps focused on economic stimulus. A state interventionist policy utilising tax breaks, lowered duties, and import quotas allowed Vargas to expand the domestic industrial base. Vargas linked his pro-industrial policies to nationalism, advocating heavy tariffs to "perfect our manufacturers to the point where it will become unpatriotic to feed or clothe ourselves with imported goods." In his early years, Vargas also relied on the support of the tenentes, junior military officers, who had long been active against the ruling coffee oligarchy, staging their own failed revolt in 1922. Vargas also quelled a paulista female worker's strike by co-opting much of their platform and requiring their "factory commissions" to use government mediation in the future. Vargas, reflecting the influence of the tenentes, even advocated a program of social welfare and reform similar to the New Deal.
Brazil's 1934 constitution, passed on July 16, contained provisions that resembled Italian corporatism, which had the enthusiastic support of the pro-fascist wing of the disparate tenente movement and industrialists, who were attracted to Mussolini's co-optation of unions through state-run, sham syndicates. As in Italy, and later Spain and Germany, Fascist-style programs would serve two important aims, stimulating industrial growth (under the guise of nationalism) and suppressing the left. Its stated purpose, however, as in Italy, was uniting all classes in mutual interests. The constitution established a new Chamber of Deputies that placed government authority over the private economy, which established a system of state-guided capitalism aimed at industrialization and reducing foreign dependency.
After 1934, the regime designated corporate representatives according to class and profession, but maintained private ownership of Brazilian-owned business. Based on a façade of increased labor rights and social investment, Brazilian corporatism, like that in Italy, was actually a strategy to increase industrial output utilizing a strong nationalist appeal. Vargas, and later Juan Peron in neighboring Argentina, another quasi-fascist, emulated Mussolini's strategy of mediating class disputes and co-opting workers' demands under the banner of nationalism. Under the guise of workers' rights also, he greatly expanded labor regulations with the consent of industry, pacified by strong industrial growth. While simultaneously expanding the mandated rights of workers, Vargas, like Mussolini, decimated unions independent of his state syndicates. The new constitution, drafted by Vargas allies, dramatically expanded social programs and set a minimum wage but also denied illiterates (largely the underclass) the right to vote and placed stringent limits on union organizing and “unauthorized” strikes.
Beyond corporatism, the 1934 constitution also heightened efforts to reduce provincial autonomy in the traditionally devolved, sprawling nation. Centralization allowed Vargas curb the oligarchic power of the landed paulista elites, who obstructed modernization through the regionalism, machine politics, and façade democracy of the Old Republic.
As he moved to the right after 1934, his ideological character and association with a global ideological orbit, however, remained ambiguous—reminiscent of the early phases of leftist leaders Fidel Castro and Daniel Ortega. To fill this ideological void and promote his new rightist policies, Vargas began moving against the tenentes while encouraging the growth of fascist paramilitaries. "Integralism", founded and led by Plínio Salgado, who adopted Fascist and Nazi symbolism and salutes, offered Vargas a new political base in his collation. A green-shirted paramilitary organization directly financed by Mussolini and Hitler, Integralism's propaganda campaigns were borrowed directly from Nazi materials —excoriations of Marxism, liberalism, and Jews that espoused fanatical nationalism (out of context in the heterogeneous and tolerant nation) and "Christian virtues."
Vargas tolerated this rise of anti-Semitism, and might have acted upon the Integralists' popularization of anti-Semitism. One example of his alleged anti-Semitism was the deportation of the pregnant, German-born Jewish wife of Luís Carlos Prestes, Olga Benário Prestes, convicted of being a spy working for USSR and illegal immigrant, to Nazi Germany, where she would die in a concentration camp. Vargas's anti-Communism and increasing conservatism also encouraged an alliance between the government and the Catholic Church, similar to Mussolini's arrangement following the Lateran Pacts.
Vargas forced the Brazilian Congress to respond to the growth of the Aliança Nacional Libertadora (ANL), a leftist collation led by the Communist Party and Luís Carlos Prestes. A revolutionary forerunner of Che Guevara, Prestes led the legendary but futile 'Long March' through the rural Brazilian interior following his participation in the failed 1922 tenente rebellion against the coffee oligarchs. This experience, however, left Prestes and some of his followers skeptical of armed conflict. Still, nonetheless, Congress branded all leftist opposition as “subversive” under a March 1935 National Security Act that allowed the President to ban the ANL, which was forced—reluctantly—to begin another armed insurrection in November. The authoritarian regime responded by imprisoning and torturing Prestes and violently crushing the Communist movement through the state terror like that of the European police states.
Although "the father of the poor" expanded the electorate, granted women's suffrage, enacted social security reforms, legalized labor unions as a populist, Vargas also whittled down the autonomy of labor and crushed a series of peasant revolts known as the cangaço.
Vargas, like Hitler in the Weimar Republic and Mussolini in the postwar Kingdom of Italy, consolidated dictatorial powers by acting within the established political system, not in a single coup d'état or revolution.
Under the Estado Novo, Vargas abolished opposition political parties, imposed rigid censorship, established a centralized police force, and filled prisons with political dissidents, while evoking a sense of nationalism that transcended class and bound the masses to the state.
Vargas eventually sided with the Allies and liberalized his regime. The shrewd, low-key, and reasoned pragmatist sided with the antifascist Allies after a period of ambiguity for economic reasons, since the Allies were more viable trading partners, and liberalized his regime because of complications arising from this alliance. Siding with the antifascist Allies created a paradox at home not unnoticed by Brazil's middle class (of a fascist-like regime joining the antifascist Allies) that Salazar and Franco avoided by maintaining nominal neutrality, allowing them to avoid both antifascist sentiment at home arising from siding with the Allies or annihilation by the Allies.
Vargas thus astutely responded to the newly liberal sentiments of a middle class that was no longer fearful of disorder and proletariat discontent by moving away from fascist repression—promising “a new postwar era of liberty” that included amnesty for political prisoners, presidential elections, and the legalization of opposition parties—including the moderated and irreparably weakened Communist Party. Historian Benjamin Keen believes that such political liberalization contributed to the downfall of the Estado Novo, being substantial enough to provoke a 1945 military coup d'état led by Dutra and Monteiro, who were alarmed with Vargas' growing ties with labor and the working classes.
The positions assumed by his political adversaries led to a crisis which culminated in the crime of "Rua Tonelero" where in an attempt to kill Vargas' main adversary, Carlos Lacerda, Major Rubens Vaz was murdered. Tenente Gregório Fortunato, chief of Vargas' personal guard, was accused of masterminding the assassination attempt. This fact aroused a reaction against Vargas and the Army generals demanded his resignation. Vargas made a final effort, calling a ministry special meeting on the eve of August 24, but rumors had spread that the armed forces officers were inflexible.
Feeling himself incapable of controlling the situation, Vargas shot himself in the chest on August 24, 1954 in the Catete Palace, in order to avoid a coup d'etat. Many historians say that Vargas may have been murdered. He wrote a letter to the Brazilian people known as his "carta testamento." His last lines stated "Calmly I take the first step toward eternity and leave life to enter History." (Getúlio Vargas, 1954).
Getúlio Dornelles Vargas is interred in his native São Borja, in Rio Grande do Sul.
History of Brazil | 1882 births | 1954 deaths | Presidents of Brazil | Politicians who committed suicide | World War II political leaders | Brazilian politicians | Brazilian lawyers | Members of the Brazilian Academy of Letters
Getúlio Vargas | Getúlio Dornelles Vargas | Getúlio Vargas | Getúlio Vargas | Getúlio Vargas | Getúlio Vargas | Getulio Vargas | ז'טוליו ורגאס | Getúlio Vargas | ジェトゥリオ・ドルネレス・ヴァルガス | Getúlio Dornelles Vargas | Getúlio Vargas | Getúlio Vargas | Getúlio Vargas | Getúlio Vargas | Getúlio Dornelles Vargas | 瓦加斯
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