Ernesto Geisel

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Fernando Ernesto Geisel
Ernesto Geisel

In office
March 15, 1974 – March 15, 1979
Vice President(s)   Adalberto Pereira dos Santos
Preceded by Emílio Garrastazú Médici
Succeeded by João Baptista de Oliveira Figueiredo

Born August 3, 1908
Bento Gonçalves, Rio Grande do Sul
Died September 12, 1996
Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro
Political party National Renewal Alliance Party - ARENA

Ernesto Beckmann Geisel, pron. IPA: [eh'nɛstu 'bɛkmã 'gajzew], (August 3, 1907 - September 12, 1996) was a Brazilian military leader and politician.

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Born in Bento Gonçalves as the son of Lutheran German immigrants, Geisel along with his brother, Orlando (1905-1979, who would be later Minister of Army in the Médici's government), entered the army early and was the first of his class when he graduated from the Military College of Porto Alegre in 1925. He acquired a better military knowledge as he attended the Escola Militar do Realengo, graduated, in 1928, as first in his class and could take part in the artillery as an Aspirante. Geisel witnessed and participated in the most prominent events of Brazilian history in the 20th century, such as the revolution of 1930, the Getúlio Vargas dictatorship and the 1964 military coup d'état that overthrew the leftist President João Goulart. In this military intervention, Geisel was an important figure and he became Military chief of Staff of President Humberto de Alencar Castelo Branco.[1]

Also in 1964 he became Lieutenant-General and in 1966 a 4 star-General. In 1969 he was made president of Petrobras, the state-owned oil company of Brazil.

In 1973 Geisel was appointed by President Emílio Garrastazú Médici and other military leaders to be the candidate of the National Renewal Alliance Party (ARENA) for the presidency. At that time, the president of Brazil was chosen by the military and then approved by the Congress in order to give an impression of free elections. Geisel was elected by a vast majority and was inaugurated on March 15, 1974 for a five-year mandate.

From 1968 to 1973, the Brazilian economy grew at a rate of more than 10% per year, the fastest in the world. But due to the oil shock crisis in 1974, development fell to 5%-6% per year. Because oil had to be imported, Brazil's foreign debt began to rise.

In the early 1970s, the radical leftists were tortured or even murdered, while the press was censored. By 1974 signals of guerrilla activities were silenced.

The official opposition against the government, the Brazilian Democratic Movement (MDB), gained many votes in the legislative elections of 1974. As a result, Geisel began a slow process of democratization, called distensão. The military regime's main censorship tool, the Fifth Institutional Act (which Geisel had often used), was banned in the end of 1978. During the Geisel administration, Brazil imported technology from Germany to install nuclear power plants.

In 1978 Geisel appointed General João Baptista de Oliveira Figueiredo as his successor. He left office on March 15, 1979.

  1. ^ "Ernesto Geisel." Encyclopedia of World Biography, 2nd ed. 17 Vols. Gale Research, 1998.


Preceded by
Emílio Garrastazú Médici
President of Brazil
1974 – 1979
Succeeded by
João Baptista de Oliveira Figueiredo
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