VARGAS, GETLIO (DORNELES)


Meaning of VARGAS, GETLIO (DORNELES) in English

born April 19, 1883, So Borja, Braz. died Aug. 24, 1954, Rio de Janeiro Vargas, 1951 president of Brazil (193045, 195154), who brought social and economic changes that helped modernize the country. Although denounced by some as an unprincipled dictator, Vargas was revered by his followers as the Father of the Poor, for his battle against big business and large landowners. Vargas was born in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, into a family prominent in state politics. Contemplating a military career, he joined the army when he was 16 but soon decided to study law. In 1908, shortly after graduating from the Prto Alegre Law School, he entered politics. By 1922 he had been elected to the National Congress, in which he served for four years. In 1926 Vargas became minister of finance in the Cabinet of President Washington Lus Pereira de Souza, a post he retained until his election as governor of Rio Grande do Sul in 1928. From his position as state governor, Vargas campaigned unsuccessfully as reform candidate for the presidency of Brazil in 1930. While appearing to accept defeat, Vargas in October of that year led the revolution, organized by his friends, that overthrew the republic. For the next 15 years Vargas was chief of state of Brazil, ruling most of that time without a congress. He held sole power as provisional president from Nov. 3, 1930, until July 17, 1934, when he was elected president by the constituent assembly. On Nov. 10, 1937, Vargas presided over a coup d'tat that destroyed the constitutional government and set up the avowedly totalitarian New State (Estado Novo). Prior to 1930 the federal government had been in effect a federation of autonomous states, dominated by rural landholders and financed largely by the proceeds of agricultural exports. Under Vargas this system was destroyed. The tax structure was revised to make state and local administrations dependent upon the central authority, the electorate was quadrupled and granted the secret ballot, women were enfranchised, extensive educational reforms were introduced, social-security laws were enacted, labour was organized and controlled by the government, and workers were assured a wide range of benefits, including a minimum wage, while business was stimulated by a program of rapid industrialization. Vargas, however, did not change the private-enterprise system, nor did his social reforms extend in practice to the rural poor. But on Oct. 29, 1945, Vargas was overthrown by a coup d'tat in a wave of democratic sentiment sweeping postwar Brazil. He still, however, retained wide popular support. Although elected as senator from Rio Grande do Sul in December 1945, he went into semiretirement until 1950, when he emerged as the successful presidential candidate of the Brazilian Labour Party. He took office on Jan. 31, 1951. As an elected president restrained by congress, a profusion of political parties, and public opinion, Vargas was unable to satisfy his labour following or to placate mounting middle-class opposition. Thus, he resorted increasingly to ultranationalistic appeals to hold popular support. By mid-1954 criticism of the government was general, and the armed forces, shocked by scandals within the regime, joined in the call for his withdrawal. Rather than accept forced retirement, Vargas took his life on Aug. 24, 1954. Rollie E. Poppino

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.