Republicans (Brazil) Explained

Country:Brazil
Republicans
Native Name:Republicanos
President:Marcos Pereira
Secretary General:Evandro Garla
Founder:Marcelo Crivella
Religion:Catholic Church (majority)[1] [2]
Universal Church of the Kingdom of God (supported)[3]
Ideology:Social conservatism
Economic liberalism
Position:Centre-right to right-wing
Youth Wing:Jovens Republicanos
Womens Wing:Mulheres Republicanas
Wing1 Title:Elders' wing
Wing1:Idosos Republicanos
Think Tank:Fundação Republicana Brasileira
Membership:495,136 (2022)
Headquarters:SDS-Setor de Diversão Sul-Ed. Miguel Badia, 30-Bloco L-3º Andar, Sala 320-Brasília/DF, Brazil
Colours: Navy Blue
Green
Yellow
Blank1 Title:TSE Identification Number
Blank1:10
Seats1 Title:Mayors
Seats2 Title:Chamber of Deputies
Seats3 Title:Federal Senate
Seats4 Title:Mercosur Parliament
Seats5 Title:State Assemblies
Seats6 Title:City Councillors
Slogan:"The real conservative party of Brazil"

Republicans[4], formerly known as Brazilian Republican Party (Portuguese: Partido Republicano Brasileiro|links=no, PRB) and originally formed as the Municipalist Renewal Party (Portuguese: Partido Municipalista Renovador|links=no, PMR) is a Brazilian political party. Its electoral number, the numerical assignment for Brazilian political parties, is 10.

The party is a social conservatist and economically liberal, it also has a strong association with the evangelical Universal Church of the Kingdom of God. As the PRB, it was the party of former Vice President of Brazil José Alencar, where it was part of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's government.[5] While it also supported Dilma Rousseff until her impeachment,[6] it was one of the closest allies of the Bolsonaro government.[7]

History

The party was founded in August 2005 as the Municipalist Renovator Party by pastors of the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God.[8] Lula's Vice President José Alencar moved to PRB on 2005 after leaving the Liberal Party.[9] In March 2006, the party was renamed the Brazilian Republican Party.

The Brazilian Republican Party first fought against President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, then rallied behind him after his re-election in 2006. According to one study, the PRB was supportive of the Lula da Silva and Rousseff presidencies “on the basis of their concern for social democracy and for eliminating inequality.”[10] However, later the PRB started to join the new rising wave of conservativism and anti-petism in Brazil and all of the PRB's deputies voted in favor of Dilma's impeachment.

They then supported the government of Michel Temer. In the 2018 presidential election, the Brazilian Republican Party supported the candidate of the Brazilian Social Democracy Party, Geraldo Alckmin. Afterwards the party started to switch its support to President Jair Bolsonaro,[11] reflecting their strong ideological affinity. For the 2022 Brazilian general election, the Republicans formed a coalition with the Liberal Party (PL) and the Progressives (PP) in order to support Jair Bolsonaro's 2022 presidential campaign.[12] [13] Candidates launched by the Republicans had their image heavily associated and sometimes were endorsed by Bolsonaro.

In August 2019, the Brazilian Republican Party changed its name into Republicanos.[14] Justifying as "the name change reinforces the reformulation of the party's program and statutes... consolidating its position as a party conservative in customs and liberal in the economy”,[15] seeking to emulate the American Republican Party.[16] The name change came with a manifesto adopting a resolutely socially conservative position defending Christian values, the traditional family and private property.[17]

Participation

The party leader was Marcos Pereira.

The party's most important members are Bishop Marcelo Crivella, Rio de Janeiro senator and nephew of Universal's founder Bishop Edir Macedo, journalist Celso Russomanno[18] and former Vice-President José Alencar. Famous football player Ronaldinho, also known as Ronaldo de Assis Moreira, joined the party in March 2018.[19]

Statistics

In 2022, it had 495,136 members.[20]

In 2012, 80% of its members were Catholic and 20% evangelical, including six from the universal Church.[21]

Ideology

The party defines itself as "Socially conservative but economically liberal", defending Christian values, the traditional family and private property. The party aligned itself with Jair Bolsonaro during his government from 2018 to 2022.

Some commentators say that the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God (UCKG), a neo-charismatic church that is organized like a business enterprise, has used the party as a base for its bishops to run for political office. According to the emeritus professor of political sciences from the University of Brasília, David Fleischer, "The PRB is an evangelical party."[22] Several members, such as Celso Russomanno, are Catholic. Several leading members, such as Edir Macedo and Marcelo Crivella, have expressed statements of Christian fundamentalism and religious intolerance. A UN report accused members of the UCKG of verbal and physical attacks on members of the Umbanda and Candomblé religions. Macedo considered participating in presidential elections in order to transform Brazil into a theocratic state.[23]

As mayor of Rio de Janeiro, Crivella called the Carnival of Rio de Janeiro an "un-Christian excess" and ordered severe financial cuts for the organisers.[24] Furthermore, he is known for statements of religious intolerance. In his 1999 book Evangelizing Africa, he claimed that homosexuality is a "terrible evil," that Catholics are "demonic", that African religions are based on "evil spirits," and that Hindus drink their children's blood.[25] [26] He has since tried to distance himself from the book, saying that it was the work of a young, immature missionary.[25]

Electoral history

Presidential elections

ElectionCandidateRunning mateCoalitionFirst roundSecond roundResult
Votes%Votes%
2006Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (PT)José Alencar (PRB)PT
PRB; PCdoB
46,662,36548.6% (#1)58,295,04260.8% (#1)Elected
2010Dilma Rousseff (PT)Michel Temer (PMDB)PT
PMDB; PR; PSB; PDT; PCdoB; PSC; PRB; PTC; PTN
47,651,43446.9% (#1)55,752,52956.1% (#1)Elected
2014PT
PMDB; PSD; PP; PR; PDT; PRB; PROS; PCdoB
43,267,66841.6% (#1)54,501,11851.6 % (#1)Elected
2018Geraldo Alckmin (PSDB)Ana Amélia (PP)PSDB
PP; PR; PRB; PSD; SD; DEM; PTB; PPS
5,096,3504,76% (#4)--Lost
2022Jair Bolsonaro (PL)Walter Braga Netto (PL)PL
PP; Republicanos
51,072,34543,2% (#2)58,206,35449,1% (#2)Lost
Source: Election Resources: Federal Elections in Brazil – Results Lookup

Legislative elections

Election Chamber of DeputiesFederal SenateRole in government
Votes%Seats+/–Votes%Seats+/–
2006244,0590.26%New264,1550.31%New
20101,633,5001.69% 63,332,8861.96% 1
20144,423,9934.55% 13301,1620.34% 0
20184,992,0165.08% 91,505,6070.88% 0
20227,618,1086.91% 124,259,2794.19% 2
Sources: Election Resources, Dados Eleitorais do Brasil (1982–2006)

Notable members

Current

Former

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Russomanno, o católico - Opinião. Estadão.
  2. Web site: Russomanno é entrevistado pelo SPTV. Do G1. SP. September 20, 2012. Eleições 2012 em São Paulo.
  3. Web site: MEC autoriza funcionamento de faculdade de partido ligado à Universal - Política. Estadão.
  4. Web site: TSE autoriza mudança do PRB para Republicanos. Poder360. pt. 15 August 2019. 27 August 2019.
  5. Web site: 2021-03-11. 2016-04-12. pt-br. Presidente do PRB anuncia que bancada votará pelo impeachment. G1.
  6. Web site: 2021-03-11. 2016-03-16. pt-br. PRB rompe com Dilma e é primeiro partido a deixar base do governo. R7.
  7. Web site: 2023-07-24. 2022-11-23. Luiz Felipe. pt-br. Barbiéri. Integrante da base de Bolsonaro, Republicanos diz que será independente no governo Lula. G1.
  8. Bruno Gomes, Les évangéliques au Brésil : stratégies territoriales et participation politique, Hérodote, vol. no 119, no. 4, 2005, p. 70-71
  9. Cristina Horta,ESCÂNDALO DO "MENSALÃO"/RUMO A 2006, folha.uol.com.br, Brazil, September 30, 2005
  10. Book: Political Handbook of the World 2014. 9781483386263. Lansford. Tom. 2014-03-20. SAGE Publications.
  11. Web site: Anne Vigna, "Brazil's religious-media-political complex".
  12. Web site: Em ato com Bolsonaro e líderes do Centrão, PP aprova aliança com PL e apoio à reeleição do presidente . 2022-10-23 . G1 . 27 July 2022 . pt-br.
  13. Web site: 2022-07-30 . Partido Republicanos oficializa apoio à candidatura de Jair Bolsonaro . 2022-10-23 . Agência Brasil . pt-br.
  14. Web site: TSE autoriza mudança do PRB para Republicanos. 2019-08-15. Poder360. pt-br. 2019-10-22.
  15. Web site: 2019-08-16 . PRB passa a se chamar "Republicanos" . 2022-10-23 . Congresso em Foco . pt-BR.
  16. Web site: PRB anuncia mudança para Republicanos e será 8º partido a trocar de nome . 2022-10-23 . VEJA . pt-BR.
  17. Web site: Maia . Dominique . 2022-07-06 . História do Republicanos: o verdadeiro Partido Conservador? Politize! . 2022-10-18 . pt-BR.
  18. Web site: Longe do PP, Celso Russomanno diz que eleitorado de Maluf é bem-vindo. JB . 8 May 2012.
  19. Web site: Brazil World Cup winner Ronaldinho joins evangelical conservative party. March 21, 2018. the Guardian.
  20. Tribunal Superior Eleitoral, Estatísticas do eleitorado – Eleitores filiados, tse.jus.br, Brazil, accessed January 14, 2023
  21. Web site: César Tralli . Klett. Russomanno é entrevistado pelo SPTV. Do G1. SP. September 20, 2012. g1.globo.com .
  22. News: Brazil World Cup winner Ronaldinho joins evangelical conservative party. Dom. Phillips. The Guardian . March 21, 2018. www.theguardian.com.
  23. Web site: RELIGION-BRAZIL: Intolerance Denounced At UN. Frayssinet. Fabiana. Interpress Service. 3 July 2009.
  24. Philipp Lichterbeck: Brasilien: Droht dem Karneval das Aus? In: Der Tagesspiegel 19 December 2017
  25. Web site: Brazil's evangelicals push politics to the right. https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221211221233/https://www.ft.com/content/7430b300-98fe-11e6-b8c6-568a43813464. December 11, 2022. subscription. live. Leahy. Joe. October 24, 2016. Financial Times. March 15, 2018.
  26. Web site: Rio de Janeiro elects mayor who said homosexuality is 'evil'. Samuels. Gabriel. November 2, 2016. The Independent. March 15, 2018.