Vargas' government was characterized by the creation of state companies such as Petrobras and the BNDES, but also by great instability, with staunch opposition from Carlos Lacerda and accusations of a coup and corruption. The culmination occurred with the Toneleiro Street shooting, a crime of which he was automatically considered a suspect by public opinion (he would later be cleared), resulting in his suicide 19 days later.[1]
During his term, Brazil's GDP grew by an average of 6.2%, more than the 4.3% average growth of his first term.[2]
Tancredo Neves, who was his Minister of Justice, said in the book Tancredo Fala de Getúlio that, in his second government, Getúlio "had the concern of freeing himself from the dictator", and that he told Tancredo: "I was a dictator because the contingencies of the country led me to dictatorship, but I want to be a constitutional president within the parameters set by the Constitution".[5]
Luís Vergara, Getúlio's private secretary from 1928 to 1945, in the book Eu fui secretário de Getúlio, says that Vargas referred to the group sworn in in 1951 as a "ministry of experience", which caused unease among the ministers. Vergara says that "knowing Getúlio's habit of only speaking the minimum and what was fair, his caution in not exceeding the limits of what was opportune and indispensable, the 'nap' revealed a weakening in the controls of self-surveillance and restraint of language", which Vergara attributes to the onset of aging and exhaustion with "fifteen uninterrupted years of government activity, multiplied worries, incessant work, political crises, personal accidents and family members".[8]
Getúlio had a tumultuous government due to the administrative measures he took and the accusations of corruption. A controversial 100% readjustment of the minimum wage led to a public protest in February 1954, culminating in the resignation of Minister João Goulart.[9]
Main Laws
Law No. 1521, of December 26, 1951, refers to acts that are detrimental to free competition or aimed at forming cartels, oligopolies or monopolies and manipulating prices and market trends;[10]
Law No. 1.522, of December 26, 1951, authorizes the federal government to intervene in the economic domain to ensure the free distribution of products necessary for the consumption of the people. It was replaced by Delegated Law No. 4 on September 26, 1962;[11]
Decree No. 30.363 of January 3, 1952, which provided for the return of foreign capital, limiting it to 8% of the total profits of international companies to the country of origin. It was repealed in 1991;[12]
Decree No. 31,546 of October 6, 1952, which regulated the work of underage apprentices and was in force until 2005;[13]
Law No. 1.802, of January 5, 1953, defined crimes against the State and Political and Social Order, and repealed the National Security Law of 1935. It remained in force until 1967, when it was replaced by another bill of the same name;[14]
Law No. 2,083, of November 12, 1953, on freedom of the press, which was in force until 1967;[15]
SUMOC Instruction No. 70 of 1953, which created multiple exchange rates and foreign exchange auctions;[16]
Law No. 2.252, of July 1, 1954, which dealt with the corruption of minors and was in force until 2009. It was repealed by Law No. 12.015.[17]
Economy
On June 20, 1952, Law No. 1628 created the National Bank for Economic and Social Development, now the BNDES, as a state institution with administrative autonomy and its own legal personality.[18]
In 1951, on his return from a trip to the Northeast to inspect the damage caused by the drought, Vargas was introduced to a list of reasons for creating a bank in the region by Horácio Láfer, the then Minister of Finance. On July 19, 1952, Law No. 1,649 created Banco do Nordeste, a development agency to promote the sustainable growth of the area by providing financial support to regional productive agents.[19]
On December 22, 1952, Law No. 1779 created the Brazilian Coffee Institute (IBC), which was abolished in 1990. In 1953, there was a major national mobilization known as the "O petróleo é nosso" (English: "Oil is ours") campaign; later, on October 3, Law No. 2,004 founded Petrobras and regulated the oil sector.[20][21]
In a Message to Congress in 1951, Getúlio says that the number of migrants from the northeast of Brazil and the north of Minas Gerais to São Paulo doubled in 1951; in 1950 there were 100,123 migrants, and the following year, 208,515.[24][25]
International relations
In March 1952, a military cooperation and aid agreement was signed between Brazil and the United States, which was in force from 1953 until 1977, when President Ernesto Geisel renounced it.[26][27]
Corruption
There were a series of accusations of corruption against members of the government and people close to Getúlio, which led him to say that he was sitting in a "sea of mud". The most serious case, which turned a large part of public opinion against Getúlio, was the Parliamentary Inquiry Commission (CPI) into the newspaper Última Hora, owned by Samuel Wainer. He was accused by Carlos Lacerda and others of receiving money from the Banco do Brasil to support Getúlio. Última Hora was practically the only press organization to support the government.[7]
In the early hours of August 5, 1954, in the Copacabana neighborhood of Rio de Janeiro, a gun attack in front of the building where Carlos Lacerda lived killed Major Rubens Florentino Vaz of the Brazilian Air Force (FAB) and wounded Carlos, a journalist, future federal deputy and governor of Guanabara and a member of the UDN, which was strongly opposed to Getúlio. The attack was attributed to Alcino João do Nascimento and his assistant Climério Euribes de Almeida, members of Getúlio's personal guard, known to the public as the "Black Guard", which was created in May 1938, shortly after an attack by integralist supporters on the Catete Palace. When Vargas heard about the attack in Tonelero Street, he said: "Carlos Lacerda was shot in the foot. I was shot twice in the back!".[28][29]
The political crisis that arose was severe because, in addition to the importance of Carlos Lacerda, the FAB, to which Major Vaz belonged, had Brigadier Eduardo Gomes of the UDN, whom Getúlio had defeated in the 1950 elections, as its great hero. The FAB set up a parallel investigation into the crime, which was nicknamed the "Republic of Galeão". On August 8, the "Black Guard" was abolished.[30]
Newspapers and radio stations ran headlines every day about the pursuit of the suspects. Alcino was captured on August 13 and Climério was caught on August 17 by Aeronautics Colonel Délio Jardim de Matos, who would later become Minister of Aeronautics. A novelty for the time, the helicopter, was even used in the hunt for the suspects.[31]
Gregório Fortunato, head of President Getúlio Vargas' personal guard, was accused of ordering the assassination attempt on Lacerda; he later admitted it. In 1956, those accused of the crime were brought to a first trial; Gregório was sentenced to 25 years in prison as the mastermind, a sentence reduced to 20 years by Juscelino Kubitschek and 15 years by João Goulart. In 1962, he was murdered in Rio de Janeiro, inside the Lemos de Brito Penitentiary, by fellow inmate Feliciano Emiliano Damas.[32][33]
Suicide
On the morning of August 24, 1954, in the Catete Palace, Vargas shot himself in the chest and left a letter, the last part of which read: "...I fought against the exploitation of Brazil. I fought against the exploitation of the people. I have fought with my chest open. Hatred, infamy and slander have not dampened my spirits. I gave you my life. Now I offer you my death. I fear nothing. Serenely I take the first step on the road to eternity and leave life to enter history"; this document became known as the Carta Testamento.[34]
The procession that accompanied Vargas's funeral to Santos Dumont Airport on August 25, from where he flew to São Borja, drew a huge crowd.[35] The reaction of the population was surprising, with public protests and the burning of opposition newspapers. Carlos Lacerda had to leave the country for fear of reprisals, and historians to this day debate whether his suicide postponed the military coup of 1964.[36][37][38]