User:Caio79 (Brazil)

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1899-1890: Rufino Eneias Galvão (Military)

1890-1892: Deodoro da Fonseca (Conservative) Died in office

1892-1894: --- (Conservative) Resigned

1894-1896: --- (Conservative) Calls an election after an angry parliament

1896-1898: --- (Liberal) Recieved vote of no confidence, new elections were called

1898-1902: --- (Liberal)

1902-1903: --- (Conservative) Called new elections to recieve more support

1903-1908: Joaquim Nabuco (Liberal) ''Reelected in 1908, loses support from parliament after been percieved as "too radical"

1908-1910: Júlio Bueno Brandão (Liberal Conservative) Resigned

1910-1915: Rodrigues Alves (Lberal Conservative)Authoritarianism grows, calls an election in 1911 to cement his power

1915-1917: Hermes da Fonseca (Liberal Conservative/Military) A de facto dictatorship starts, left after the Zimmermann affair

1917-1925: Arthur Bernardes (Liberal Conservative) Calls election in 1920, Second Regency starts in 1921

1925-1930: Estácio Coimbra (Liberal Conservative) A crisis makes the libcon government fall and elections are called

1930: Adolfo Bergamini (Radical Liberal) Resigned after being attacked

1930-1931: Francisco Campos (Liberal Conservative) Resigned in favor of Salgado

1931-1940: Plínio Salgado (Integralist) Removed in the May 1st coup

1940: José Pessoa (Military)

1941-1942: --- (Interim)

1942-1951: Osvaldo Aranha (National Liberal) Reelected in 46 and 50, resigned in 51

1951-1956: Alberto Pasqualini (Labor) Reelected in 54, resigned

1956-1958: João Mangabeira (Democratic Socialist)

1958-1962: Ademar de Barros (Brazilian Democratic Union) Forced into elections after something funny

1962-1963: --- Resigned

1963-1964: --- Recieved a motion of no confidence and new elections were callled

1964-1968: Affonso Arinos (Progressive)

1968-1972: Juscelino Kubitschek (Progressive)

1972-1976: ---

1976: --- Lost support to Brizola

1976-1980: Leonel Brizola (Labor)

1980-1983: --- Government loses support and new elections are called

1983-1987: Gilberto Gil (Democratic Socialist)

1987-1990: --- Called an election ahead of time to seek a new mandate for new economic measures

1990-1994: Fernando Collor

1994-2000: Silvio Santos Reelected in 94

2000-2002: Enéas Carneiro

2002-2011: Luiz Inácio da Silva (Democratic Socialist) Reelected in 06 and 10, resigned in 2011

2011-2014: Marta Suplicy (Democratic Socialist) Elected in 14 but failed to form a government leading to another ekection in the same year

2014-2018: Levy Fidelix

2018-2022: Ciro Gomes (Labor)

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1889: The Viscount of Ouro Preto (Liberal)

1889-1890: Viscount of Maracaju (Independent)

1890-1891: João Alfredo Correia de Oliveira (Conservative)

1891-1893: Tomas José Coelho de Almeida (Conservative)

1893-1895: -(Conservative)

1895-1898: Joaquim Nabuco (Liberal)

1898-1899: - (Conservative)

1899-1902: Rui Barbosa (Liberal)

(Failed coup/Chaos)

1902 - 1906: Military (1906)

(Failed coup/Chaos)

1906 - 1907: (1907)

1907 - 1909: Júlio Bueno Brandão (Liberal Conservative)

1909 - 1910: Rodrigues Alves (Liberal Conservative)

1910 - 1911: Júlio Bueno Brandão (Liberal Conservative)

1911 - 1915: Minas Gerais clique hardliner type (1912)

1915 - 1917: Epitácio Pessoa (Liberal Conservative)

(1917) 1917 - 1919: Artur Bernardes (Liberal Conservative)

1919 - 1921: Independent nobleman, dinstant relative to the imperial family (Made the Paulistas fall a bit)

(1921) 1921 - 1924: far-right clique, kinda outsider

(1924) 1924 - 1926: Radical/Independent, Diplomat and politician (incapable)

(1926) 1926 - 1929: Gaucho/Northern clique (Forced to resign, puppet of some guy)

1929 - 1930: Diplomat and ideologue (Interim) (São Paulo - far right clique compromise) (Some crisis idk)

(1930) 1930 - 1932: Washington Luís (Liberal Conservative)

1930 - 1940: Plínio Salgado (Integralist)

May 1940 - June 1941: Military

June 1941 - June 1942: Center Left

June 1942 - December 1942: Center Left

December 1942 - July 1943 : Center Right

July 1943 - March 1946: Center (1943, 1946)

March 1946 - July 1949: Center Left

(1949) July 1949 - March 1951: Minority Center Left

March 1951 - November 1954: Center (1952)

November 1954 - May 1955: Caretaker

May 1955 - October 1956: Alberto Pasqualini (Labor)

October 1956 - March 1957: Center

March 1957 - May 1958: Center Left

May 1958 - November 1958: Center Left

November 1958 - August 1959: Caretaker

(1959) August 1959 - January 1960: Center Left

January 1960 - July 1962: Center

July 1962 - April 1963: Center minority

(1963) April 1963 - December 1964: Center

December 1964 - September 1965: Caretaker

September 1965 - May 1967: Center Right

(1968) June 1968 - December 1968: Center Right

December 1968 - February 1972: Juscelino Kubitschek (Progressive)

February 1972 - July 1973: Center Right (1972)

July 1973 - November 1974: Center Right

November 1974 - August 1979: Leonel Brizola (July 1976) (Labor)

(1979) August 1979 - Octouber 1980: Ulysses Guimarães (Progressive)

October 1980 - December 1982: Itamar Franco (Labor)

December 1982 - August 1983: Magalhães Pinto (National Democratic)

(1983) August 1983 - April 1987: Center Left

April 1987 - July 1987: Center Right

(1987) July 1987 - April 1988: Center Left

April 1988 - July 1989: Center Left

July 1989 - June 1992: Center Left

(1992) April 1992 - April 1994: Fernando Collor

April 1994 - June 2000: Silvio Santos (1994, 1998)

June 2000 - April 2002: Enéas Carneiro

(2002, 2006) April 2002-2009: Lula

2009-2010: Gilberto Gil

2010-2011: Lula (2010)

2011-2014: Marta Suplicy

(2014) 2014-2018: Levy Fidelix

(2018) 2018-2022: Ciro Gomes