fbpx
Wikipedia

Progressistas

Progressistas (lit.'Progressives'; PP) is a centre-right[2] to right-wing political party in Brazil. Founded in 1995 as the Brazilian Progressive Party, it emerged from parties that were successors to ARENA, the ruling party of the Brazilian military dictatorship.[6] A pragmatist party, it supported the governments of presidents Fernando Henrique CardosoLuiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Dilma Rousseff, and Michel Temer. Largely it was the party of the politics of Paulo Maluf, a former governor and mayor of São Paulo. Of all political parties, in corruption investigation Operation Car Wash, the Progressistas had the most convictions.[7]

Progressives
Progressistas
PresidentCiro Nogueira Lima Filho
FoundedApril 14, 1995 (as PPB)
April 4, 2003 (as PP)
Merger ofReform Progressive Party (PPR),
Progressive Party (PP)
HeadquartersSenado Federal - Anexo - 17º Andar, Brasília
São Paulo
LGBT wingPP Diversidade
Membership1,437,447[1]
IdeologyConservative liberalism[2][3]
National conservatism[4]
Brazilian nationalism[4]
Social conservatism[4]
Federalism
Political positionCentre-right[2] to right-wing[5]
Colours  Sky blue
  Dark blue
TSE Identification Number11
Chamber of Deputies
47 / 513
Federal Senate
6 / 81
Governorships
1 / 27
State Assemblies
70 / 1,060
City councillors
4,840 / 51,610
Website
www.pp.org.br

The party in recent years had fully embraced the right. In the 2018 Brazilian general election, the party supported the candidacy of Geraldo Alckmin. After the election, although they remained neutral in the second round, the party has almost fully supported the policies of Jair Bolsonaro, supporting his candidacy for president in 2022 and voting with him 93% of the time.[8]

History

 
The party's old logo.

Founded in 1995, as Brazilian Progressive Party (PPB), by the union of:

The party entered in coalition with the Brazilian Social Democracy Party and the Liberal Front Party, supporting President Fernando Henrique Cardoso in the 1998 Brazilian general election.

In the 2002 general election, the party informally supported the candidacy of Ciro Gomes in the first round and formally supported José Serra in the second round.

In 2003 the party re-changed its name to the Progressive Party. PP has also supported the Workers' Party-led government from 2003 to 2015.

At the parliamentary elections, held in October 2006, the party won 42 of the 513 seats in the chamber of deputies, and it has 1 of the 81 seats in the Senate. At the 2010 elections, PP won 41 seats in the Chamber of Deputies, and made gains in the Senate for a total of 5 seats. It lost an extremely close gubernatorial runoff in Roraima to the PSDB, and won no state governorships.

In the 2010 elections , alliances between moderate and left-leaning parties took place in several places, such as in Bahia, where the PP was part of the PT candidate's coalition, having even nominated its vice governor.  About this type of coalition, the former mayor of São Paulo and former PT member Luísa Erundina declared, still in May 2010, that "It is sad, agonizing to see Maluf's PP with PCdoB. It's all the same." [9]

Its most well-known politicians are Paulo Maluf, mayor and governor of São Paulo for several terms, Esperidião Amin, former governor of Santa Catarina and senator, and Francisco Dornelles, former minister of Labour and senator for the state of Rio de Janeiro.

The party has from its very beginning shown a tendency for regional division, with the section from Rio Grande do Sul state often threatening with secession, in part due to what is viewed by them as condescendence of the party's national direction towards members involved in corruption scandals, including Paulo Maluf (who has recently been discharged from his post as de facto leader of PP). The national orientation of the party has been one of close alliance with Lula's Workers' Party government (except on issues sensitive to the right wing core of PP, such as taxes)[citation needed], while the section of Rio Grande do Sul once more show a defiant stance in aligning itself more often with the opposition.

The Progressive Party supported the impeachment of Dilma Rousseff, splitting its alliance with the Worker's Party.

This party was most affected by the Petrobras corruption scandal, damaging its national popularity.[10]

The party supported the candidacy of Geraldo Alckmin in 2018, but did not endorse a candidate in the second round.

After the election, the party joined a coalition with the Republicanos and the Liberal Party to support Jair Bolsonaro in government.

Ideology

The party has traditionally been, like many right-wing parties in Brazil, one of pragmatism and moderation, largely allying with larger left-wing parties.[11] The party's main positions in Congress have been that of business interests supporting lower taxation, highlighing those proposals in accordance with other economic growth principles of the left. When allied with the governments of Lula and Dilma, the party supported the Bolsa Familia program in confluence with tax cuts for economic growth.[12]

In more recent years however, the party has become more stridently national conservative, representing the less religious and less populist conservatism that existed in Brazil before the election of Bolsonaro. The party supported greater economic nationalism than some of its coalition partners and is generally less in support of the military than the Liberal Party. However, in general, the party supports Bolsonarismo, and many of his cabinet members are members or have joined the party.[13]

 
Bolsonaro and the party president Nogueira, 2021

Notable Members

Electoral history

Legislative elections

Election Chamber of Deputies Federal Senate Role in government
Votes % Seats +/– Votes % Seats +/–
1998 7,558,601 11.35%
60 / 513
New 9,246,089 14.95%
3 / 81
New Coalition
2002 6,828,375 7.81%
48 / 513
  12 6,903,581 4.49%
1 / 81
  2 Coalition
2006 6,662,309 7.15%
42 / 513
  6 4,228,431 5.01%
1 / 81
  0 Coalition
2010 6,330,062 6.55%
41 / 513
  1 9,170,015 5.38%
5 / 81
  4 Independent
2014 6,429,791 6.61%
38 / 513
  3 1,931,738 2.16%
5 / 81
  0 Coalition
2018 5,480,067 5.57%
37 / 513
  1 7,529,901 4.39%
6 / 81
  1 Coalition
2022 8,704,341 7.90%
47 / 513
  10 7,592,391 7.47%
7 / 81
  2 Opposition
Sources: Election Resources,

References

  1. ^ (Portuguese)"Eleitores filiados". inter04. Retrieved March 3, 2017.
  2. ^ a b c Hartman, Hattie (2017). Brazil: Restructuring the Urban. John Wiley & Sons. p. 79.
  3. ^ Dirk Berg-Schlosser; Norbert Kersting (28 June 2003). Poverty and Democracy: Self-Help and Political Participation in Third World Cities. Zed Books. p. 24. ISBN 978-1-84277-205-8.
  4. ^ a b c "Partido Progressista afirma que quer atrair eleitor conservador". O Estado de S. Paulo.
  5. ^ Vasconcellos, Fábio (29 March 2016). "Maioria dos partidos se posiciona como de centro. Veja quem sobra no campo da Direita e da Esquerda" [Majority of the parties identify themselves as centrists. Check which ones identify as left-wing and right-wing] (in Portuguese). O Globo. Retrieved 5 April 2018.
  6. ^ joaogado (2020-12-08). "Partidos em números: PP e PL". Pindograma. Retrieved 2022-09-16.
  7. ^ Benites, A. (2015-03-08). "Partido Progressista, o 'filho' da ditadura que coleciona escândalos". El País Brasil (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2022-09-16.
  8. ^ Avilés-Trigueros, Marcelino; Agudo Barriuso, Marta, eds. (2021-06-22). Research in Retina and Vision. S. Karger AG. doi:10.1159/isbn.978-3-318-07009-5. ISBN 978-3-318-07009-5. S2CID 241189341.
  9. ^ "Erundina diz que dá agonia ver PP ao lado do PCdoB - Política". Estadão (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2022-09-16.
  10. ^ "O Globo - A lista de investigados da Lava-Jato no STF". infograficos.oglobo.globo.com.
  11. ^ Power, Timothy J.; Rodrigues-Silveira, Rodrigo (2019-02-07). "Mapping Ideological Preferences in Brazilian Elections, 1994-2018: A Municipal-Level Study". Brazilian Political Science Review. 13. doi:10.1590/1981-3821201900010001. ISSN 1981-3821. S2CID 159109936.
  12. ^ joaogado (2020-12-08). "Partidos em números: PP e PL". Pindograma. Retrieved 2022-09-16.
  13. ^ Benites, A. (2015-03-08). "Partido Progressista, o 'filho' da ditadura que coleciona escândalos". El País Brasil (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2022-09-16.
Preceded by Numbers of Brazilian Official Political Parties
11 - PP
Succeeded by


progressistas, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, pr. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article September 2021 This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in Portuguese March 2021 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Portuguese article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 1 447 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Portuguese Wikipedia article at pt Progressistas see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated pt Progressistas to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Progressistas news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Progressistas lit Progressives PP is a centre right 2 to right wing political party in Brazil Founded in 1995 as the Brazilian Progressive Party it emerged from parties that were successors to ARENA the ruling party of the Brazilian military dictatorship 6 A pragmatist party it supported the governments of presidents Fernando Henrique Cardoso Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva Dilma Rousseff and Michel Temer Largely it was the party of the politics of Paulo Maluf a former governor and mayor of Sao Paulo Of all political parties in corruption investigation Operation Car Wash the Progressistas had the most convictions 7 Progressives ProgressistasPresidentCiro Nogueira Lima FilhoFoundedApril 14 1995 as PPB April 4 2003 as PP Merger ofReform Progressive Party PPR Progressive Party PP HeadquartersSenado Federal Anexo 17º Andar BrasiliaSao PauloLGBT wingPP DiversidadeMembership1 437 447 1 IdeologyConservative liberalism 2 3 National conservatism 4 Brazilian nationalism 4 Social conservatism 4 FederalismPolitical positionCentre right 2 to right wing 5 Colours Sky blue Dark blueTSE Identification Number11Chamber of Deputies47 513Federal Senate6 81Governorships1 27State Assemblies70 1 060City councillors4 840 51 610Websitewww pp org brPolitics of BrazilPolitical partiesElectionsThe party in recent years had fully embraced the right In the 2018 Brazilian general election the party supported the candidacy of Geraldo Alckmin After the election although they remained neutral in the second round the party has almost fully supported the policies of Jair Bolsonaro supporting his candidacy for president in 2022 and voting with him 93 of the time 8 Contents 1 History 2 Ideology 3 Notable Members 4 Electoral history 4 1 Legislative elections 5 ReferencesHistory Edit The party s old logo Founded in 1995 as Brazilian Progressive Party PPB by the union of the Reform Progressive Party founded in 1993 by Democratic Social Party and Christian Democratic Party the Progressive Party founded in 1993 by the Social Labour Party and the Reform Labour Party The party entered in coalition with the Brazilian Social Democracy Party and the Liberal Front Party supporting President Fernando Henrique Cardoso in the 1998 Brazilian general election In the 2002 general election the party informally supported the candidacy of Ciro Gomes in the first round and formally supported Jose Serra in the second round In 2003 the party re changed its name to the Progressive Party PP has also supported the Workers Party led government from 2003 to 2015 At the parliamentary elections held in October 2006 the party won 42 of the 513 seats in the chamber of deputies and it has 1 of the 81 seats in the Senate At the 2010 elections PP won 41 seats in the Chamber of Deputies and made gains in the Senate for a total of 5 seats It lost an extremely close gubernatorial runoff in Roraima to the PSDB and won no state governorships In the 2010 elections alliances between moderate and left leaning parties took place in several places such as in Bahia where the PP was part of the PT candidate s coalition having even nominated its vice governor About this type of coalition the former mayor of Sao Paulo and former PT member Luisa Erundina declared still in May 2010 that It is sad agonizing to see Maluf s PP with PCdoB It s all the same 9 Its most well known politicians are Paulo Maluf mayor and governor of Sao Paulo for several terms Esperidiao Amin former governor of Santa Catarina and senator and Francisco Dornelles former minister of Labour and senator for the state of Rio de Janeiro The party has from its very beginning shown a tendency for regional division with the section from Rio Grande do Sul state often threatening with secession in part due to what is viewed by them as condescendence of the party s national direction towards members involved in corruption scandals including Paulo Maluf who has recently been discharged from his post as de facto leader of PP The national orientation of the party has been one of close alliance with Lula s Workers Party government except on issues sensitive to the right wing core of PP such as taxes citation needed while the section of Rio Grande do Sul once more show a defiant stance in aligning itself more often with the opposition The Progressive Party supported the impeachment of Dilma Rousseff splitting its alliance with the Worker s Party This party was most affected by the Petrobras corruption scandal damaging its national popularity 10 The party supported the candidacy of Geraldo Alckmin in 2018 but did not endorse a candidate in the second round After the election the party joined a coalition with the Republicanos and the Liberal Party to support Jair Bolsonaro in government Ideology EditThe party has traditionally been like many right wing parties in Brazil one of pragmatism and moderation largely allying with larger left wing parties 11 The party s main positions in Congress have been that of business interests supporting lower taxation highlighing those proposals in accordance with other economic growth principles of the left When allied with the governments of Lula and Dilma the party supported the Bolsa Familia program in confluence with tax cuts for economic growth 12 In more recent years however the party has become more stridently national conservative representing the less religious and less populist conservatism that existed in Brazil before the election of Bolsonaro The party supported greater economic nationalism than some of its coalition partners and is generally less in support of the military than the Liberal Party However in general the party supports Bolsonarismo and many of his cabinet members are members or have joined the party 13 Bolsonaro and the party president Nogueira 2021Notable Members EditEsperidiao Amin former mayor of Florianopolis and former Federal Deputy former Governor and Senator of Santa Catarina Roberto Campos former Minister of planning for the military dictatorship and senator for Mato Grosso Severino Cavalcanti former President of the Chamber of Deputies and deputy for Pernambuco Tereza Cristina former Federal Deputy for Mato Grasso do Sul and former Minister of Agriculture Luis Carlos Heinze Senator and former Federal Deputy for Rio Grande do Sul Paulo Maluf a former Governor and Mayor of Sao Paulo Ciro Nogueira former Chief of Staff of the Presidency Senator from Piaui and National President of the ProgressistasElectoral history EditLegislative elections Edit Election Chamber of Deputies Federal Senate Role in governmentVotes Seats Votes Seats 1998 7 558 601 11 35 60 513 New 9 246 089 14 95 3 81 New Coalition2002 6 828 375 7 81 48 513 12 6 903 581 4 49 1 81 2 Coalition2006 6 662 309 7 15 42 513 6 4 228 431 5 01 1 81 0 Coalition2010 6 330 062 6 55 41 513 1 9 170 015 5 38 5 81 4 Independent2014 6 429 791 6 61 38 513 3 1 931 738 2 16 5 81 0 Coalition2018 5 480 067 5 57 37 513 1 7 529 901 4 39 6 81 1 Coalition2022 8 704 341 7 90 47 513 10 7 592 391 7 47 7 81 2 OppositionSources Election Resources Dados Eleitorais do Brasil 1982 2006 References Edit Portuguese Eleitores filiados inter04 Retrieved March 3 2017 a b c Hartman Hattie 2017 Brazil Restructuring the Urban John Wiley amp Sons p 79 Dirk Berg Schlosser Norbert Kersting 28 June 2003 Poverty and Democracy Self Help and Political Participation in Third World Cities Zed Books p 24 ISBN 978 1 84277 205 8 a b c Partido Progressista afirma que quer atrair eleitor conservador O Estado de S Paulo Vasconcellos Fabio 29 March 2016 Maioria dos partidos se posiciona como de centro Veja quem sobra no campo da Direita e da Esquerda Majority of the parties identify themselves as centrists Check which ones identify as left wing and right wing in Portuguese O Globo Retrieved 5 April 2018 joaogado 2020 12 08 Partidos em numeros PP e PL Pindograma Retrieved 2022 09 16 Benites A 2015 03 08 Partido Progressista o filho da ditadura que coleciona escandalos El Pais Brasil in Brazilian Portuguese Retrieved 2022 09 16 Aviles Trigueros Marcelino Agudo Barriuso Marta eds 2021 06 22 Research in Retina and Vision S Karger AG doi 10 1159 isbn 978 3 318 07009 5 ISBN 978 3 318 07009 5 S2CID 241189341 Erundina diz que da agonia ver PP ao lado do PCdoB Politica Estadao in Brazilian Portuguese Retrieved 2022 09 16 O Globo A lista de investigados da Lava Jato no STF infograficos oglobo globo com Power Timothy J Rodrigues Silveira Rodrigo 2019 02 07 Mapping Ideological Preferences in Brazilian Elections 1994 2018 A Municipal Level Study Brazilian Political Science Review 13 doi 10 1590 1981 3821201900010001 ISSN 1981 3821 S2CID 159109936 joaogado 2020 12 08 Partidos em numeros PP e PL Pindograma Retrieved 2022 09 16 Benites A 2015 03 08 Partido Progressista o filho da ditadura que coleciona escandalos El Pais Brasil in Brazilian Portuguese Retrieved 2022 09 16 Preceded by10 REPUBLICANOS Numbers of Brazilian Official Political Parties11 PP Succeeded by12 DLP PDT This article about a Brazilian political party or entity is a stub You can help Wikipedia by expanding it vte Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Progressistas amp oldid 1137248678, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.