Vice President of Brazil

The Vice President of Brazil (Portuguese: Vice-Presidente do Brasil), officially the Vice President of the Federative Republic of Brazil (Vice-Presidente da República Federativa do Brasil), or simply the Vice President of the Republic (Vice-Presidente da República) is the second-highest ranking government official in the executive branch of the Government of Brazil, preceded only by the President. The Vice President's primary role is to replace the president on the event of their death, resignation, or impeachment, and to temporarily take over the presidential powers and duties while the president is abroad, or otherwise temporarily unable to carry out their duties. The vice president is elected jointly with the President as their running mate.

Vice President of the Federative Republic of Brazil
Vice-Presidente da República Federativa do Brasil
Coat of arms of Brazil
Vice Presidential Standard
Incumbent
Hamilton Mourão

since 1 January 2019
Federal government of Brazil
StyleMr. Vice President[1]
(informal)
The Most Excellent and His Excellency
(formal)
Status2nd highest in executive branch
Member ofCabinet
National Defense Council
ResidencePalácio do Jaburu
SeatBrasilia
NominatorPresident of Brazil, Political party
AppointerDirect popular vote (two rounds if necessary)
Term lengthFour years, renewable once
Constituting instrumentConstitution of Brazil
Inaugural holderMarshal Floriano Peixoto
FormationFebruary 26, 1891
SuccessionFirst
WebsiteVice Presidency

The office has existed since the Proclamation of the Republic in 1889, although it was only officially instituted as of the 1891 Constitution. It has been in place throughout all of Brazil's republican history, save for the fifteen years of the Vargas Era, when it was officially abolished.

Requirements

The requirements to run for the office of vice president are exactly those of the presidency itself. In addition to the ordinary requirements to run for political office in Brazil, under the terms of article 14 of the Constitution, a candidate for the vice presidency must be a natural-born citizen of Brazil (which under certain circumstances may include the offspring of one or two Brazilian parents living abroad) and be at least 35 years of age.

Election and tenure

The president and vice president are elected on a single ticket for a four-year term and are inaugurated on 1 January of the year following that of the election. Both may be re-elected for a subsequent term.

Vice presidents succeeding a sitting president may be reelected for an additional term. However, the vice president is not eligible to run for a second full term, as under Brazilian law any partial term counts toward the limit of two consecutive terms. Due to the wording of the constitution's provisions on term limits, whenever the vice president serves as acting president when the president is either abroad or suspended from office as a result of impeachment, it counts as a partial term.

Workplace and official residence

The vice president works in an annex building of the Palácio do Planalto. The official residence of the vice president is the Palácio do Jaburu, inaugurated in 1977.

Ascension to the presidency

Since the Proclamation of the Republic in 1889, eight Vice Presidents have been called upon to replace former Presidents: four due to death of the incumbent (Nilo Peçanha, Delfim Moreira, Café Filho, and José Sarney), two due to resignation (Floriano Peixoto and João Goulart), and two due to impeachment conviction[lower-alpha 1] (Itamar Franco and Michel Temer).

List of vice presidents

  Vice presidents elect directly
  Vice presidents elect indirectly

No. Vice President Period of the term
(duration of the term)
Party President Notes Election

First Republic

First Republic
(Old Republic)
1 Floriano Peixoto 26 February 1891

23 November 1891
(8 months and 28 days)
None (military) Deodoro da Fonseca Ascended to the Presidency due to resignation of the holder. 1891
Vacant
(2 years, 11 months and 23 days)
Floriano Peixoto
2 Manuel Vitorino 15 November 1894

14 November 1898
(4 years)
Federal Republican Party
PR Federal
Prudente de Morais 1894
3 Francisco Rosa e Silva 15 November 1898

14 November 1902
(4 years)
Federal Republican Party
PR Federal
Campos Sales 1898
Silviano Brandão Died before taking office Mineiro Republican Party
PRM
Rodrigues Alves 1902
Vacant
(7 months and 2 days)
4 Afonso Pena 17 June 1903

14 November 1906
(3 years, 4 months and 29 days)
Mineiro Republican Party
PRM
Elected for vice president in 1903 after the death of predecessor. 1903
5 Nilo Peçanha 15 November 1906

14 June 1909
(2 years, 6 months and 30 days)
Fluminense Republican Party
PRF
Afonso Pena Ascended to the Presidency due to death of the holder. 1906
Vacant
(1 year, 5 months and 1 day)
Nilo Peçanha
6 Venceslau Brás 15 November 1910

14 November 1914
(4 years)
Mineiro Republican Party
PRM
Hermes da Fonseca 1910
7 Urbano Santos 15 November 1914

14 November 1918
(4 years)
Mineiro Republican Party
PRM
Venceslau Brás 1914
8 Delfim Moreira 15 November 1918

16 January 1919
(2 months and 1 day)
Mineiro Republican Party
PRM
Rodrigues Alves Assumed as acting president, in the condition of vice president, due to illness of President-elect Rodrigues Alves. After Alves' death on 16 January 1919, Moreira assumed as acting president, leaving the vice presidency temporarily vacant. 1918
Vacant
(6 months and 12 days)
Delfim Moreira
8 Delfim Moreira 28 July 1919

1 July 1920
(11 months and 3 days)
Mineiro Republican Party
PRM
Epitácio Pessoa Died while in office. 1918
Vacant
(4 months and 9 days)
9 Bueno de Paiva 10 November 1920

14 November 1922
(2 years and 5 days)
Mineiro Republican Party
PRM
Elected to substitute his predecessor. 1920
- Urbano Santos Died before taking office Mineiro Republican Party
PRM
Artur Bernardes 1922
10 Estácio Coimbra 15 November 1922

14 November 1926
(4 years)
Barreiros Republican Party
PR Barreiros
1922
11 Fernando de Melo Viana 15 November 1926

24 October 1930
(3 years, 11 months and 9 days)
Mineiro Republican Party
PRM
Washington Luís In the end of his term, Melo was removed from office by the Revolution of 1930. 1926
- Vital Soares Didn't take office due to the Revolution of 1930 Baiano Republican Party
PRB
Júlio Prestes Vital Soares and Júlio Prestes, elected on 1 March 1930, didn't take office due to the coup d'état that removed Washington Luís and Fernando de Melo Viana. 1930

Vargas Era
(Second and Third Republics)

Vargas Era
(Second and Third Republics)
The office of Vice President was extinct by the Constitution of 1934, but was later restored by the Constitution of 1946

Fourth Republic
(Populist Republic)

Fourth Republic
(Populist Republic)
12 Nereu Ramos 19 September 1946

30 January 1951
(4 years, 4 months and 12 days)
Social Democratic Party
PSD
Eurico Gaspar Dutra 1945
13 Café Filho 31 January 1951

24 August 1954
(3 years, 6 months and 24 days)
Social Progressive Party
PSP
Getúlio Vargas Ascended to the Presidency due to death of the holder. 1950
Vacant
(1 year, 5 months and 7 days)
Café Filho
Carlos Luz
Nereu Ramos
14 João Goulart 31 January 1956

25 August 1961
(5 years, 6 months and 25 days)
Brazilian Labour Party
PTB
Juscelino Kubitschek Ascended to the Presidency due to the resignation of the holder. 1955
Jânio Quadros 1960
Vacant
(2 years, 7 months and 8 days)
Ranieri Mazzilli
João Goulart

Fifth Republic
(Military Dictatorship)

Fifth Republic
(Military Dictatorship)
Vacant
(13 days)
Ranieri Mazzilli
15 José Maria Alkmin 15 April 1964

14 March 1967
(2 years and 11 months)
Social Democratic Party
PSD
Humberto Castelo Branco 1964
None (civilian)
National Renewal Alliance
ARENA
16 Pedro Aleixo 15 March 1967

31 August 1969
2 years, 5 months and 16 days)
National Renewal Alliance
ARENA
Artur da Costa e Silva Prevented from assuming the Presidency due to the holder's vacancy by the Provisory Governative Junta of 1969. 1966
Vacant
(1 month and 30 days)
Provisory Governative Junta of 1969
17 Augusto Rademaker 30 October 1969

14 March 1974
(4 years, 4 months and 15 days)
National Renewal Alliance
ARENA
Emílio Garrastazu Médici 1969
18 Adalberto Pereira dos Santos 15 March 1974

14 March 1979
(5 years)
National Renewal Alliance
ARENA
Ernesto Geisel 1974
19 Aureliano Chaves 15 March 1979

14 March 1985
(6 years)
National Renewal Alliance
ARENA
João Figueiredo 1978
Democratic Social Party
PDS
Liberal Front Party
PFL

Sixth Republic
(New Republic)

Sixth Republic
(New Republic)
20 José Sarney 15 March 1985

21 April 1985
(1 month and 6 days)
Brazilian Democratic Movement Party
PMDB
Tancredo Neves Ascended to the Presidency due to death of the holder. 1985
Vacant
(4 years, 10 months and 22 days)
José Sarney
21 Itamar Franco 15 March 1990

29 December 1992
(2 years, 9 months and 14 days)
National Reconstruction Party
PRN
Fernando Collor Ascended to the Presidency due to resignation of the holder. 1989
Brazilian Democratic Movement Party
PMDB
Vacant
(2 years and 3 days)
Itamar Franco
22 Marco Maciel 1 January 1995

31 December 2002
(8 years)
Liberal Front Party
PFL
Fernando Henrique Cardoso 1994
1998
23 José Alencar 1 January 2003

31 December 2010
(8 years)
Liberal Party
PL
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva 2002
Brazilian Republican Party
PRB
2006
24 Michel Temer 1 January 2011

31 August 2016
(5 years, 7 months and 30 days)
Brazilian Democratic Movement Party
PMDB
Dilma Rousseff Ascended to the Presidency due to impeachment of the holder. 2010
Brazilian Democratic Movement
MDB
2014
Vacant
(2 years, 4 months and 1 day)
Michel Temer
25 Hamilton Mourão 1 January 2019
(3 years, 10 months and 5 days)
Brazilian Labour Renewal Party
PRTB Republicans
Jair Bolsonaro 2018

Vice President-elect

No. Vice President Portrait Will take office Political party President(s) Elected
26 Geraldo Alckmin 1 January 2023 Brazilian Socialist Party
PSB
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva 2022

Living former Vice Presidents of the Republic

As of 6 November 2022, there are two living former vice presidents (both also former presidents). The most recent death of a former vice president was that of Marco Maciel (1995–2002), on 12 June 2021.[2]

See also

  • List of current vice presidents

Notes

  1. President Fernando Collor de Mello was impeached by the Chamber of Deputies, but resigned before being convicted in the Senate, resulting in Itamar Franco becoming President while the trial of Collor continued (eventually resulting in a conviction and his disqualification from public office for eight years).

References

  1. "Decreto nº 9.758, de 11 de abril de 2019" (in Portuguese) (70–A). Impressa Nacional. 11 April 2019: 5. ISSN 1677-7042. Retrieved 4 February 2021. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  2. "Morre Marco Maciel, ex-senador e ex-vice-presidente da República". Senado Federal (in Brazilian Portuguese). Agência Senado. 12 June 2021. Retrieved 5 November 2022.
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