Jader Barbalho

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Jader Barbalho
Barbalho in 2011
Senator for Pará
Assumed office
7 April 2015
Preceded byFernando Ribeiro
In office
28 December 2011 – 30 January 2015
Preceded byJosé Nery
Succeeded byFernando Ribeiro
In office
1 February 1995 – 5 October 2001
Preceded byAlmir Gabriel
Succeeded byFernando Ribeiro
Federal Deputy for Pará
In office
1 February 2003 – 1 February 2011
ConstituencyAt-large
In office
1 February 1975 – 14 May 1981
ConstituencyAt-large
President of the Federal Senate
In office
14 February 2001 – 19 September 2001
Preceded byAntônio Carlos Magalhães
Succeeded byRamez Tebet
Governor of Pará
In office
1 January 1991 – 3 April 1994
Vice GovernorCarlos Santos
Preceded byHélio Gueiros
Succeeded byCarlos Santos
In office
15 March 1983 – 15 March 1987
Vice GovernorLaércio Franco
Preceded byAlacid Nunes
Succeeded byHélio Gueiros
Minister of Social Security
In office
29 July 1988 – 15 March 1990
PresidentJosé Sarney
Preceded byRenato Archer
Succeeded byAntônio Rogério Magri
Minister of Agrarian Development
In office
22 September 1987 – 29 July 1988
PresidentJosé Sarney
Preceded byMarcos Freire
Succeeded byLeopoldo Pacheco Bessone
Personal details
Born (1944-10-27) 27 October 1944 (age 79)
Belém, Pará, Brazil
Political partyMDB

Jader Fontenelle Barbalho (born 27 October 1944) is a Brazilian politician, businessman and landowner from the state of

.

Barbalho is a national figure, known throughout Brazil, albeit a controversial one. There have been raised numerous allegations of

Senator thrice and Minister
twice.

In 2000, Barbalho was the President of the

Superintendência de Desenvolvimento da Amazônia (SUDAM - Superintendence for Amazon's Development) development agency and the Instituto Nacional de Colonização e Reforma Agrária
(INCRA - National Institute for Colonization and Agrarian Reform). Barbalho was forced to resign the office, later briefly arrested, and the SUDAM was closed. However, he was subsequently elected Federal Deputy in 2002 and 2006 and Senator in 2010.

Biography

Youth and education

Jader (as he now spells his first name),[clarification needed] was born in Belém, capital of Pará. Jader's parents are Laércio Wilson Barbalho (father) and Joanelle Fontenelle Barbalho (mother). Jader studied law at the Federal University of Pará (Universidade Federal do Pará), graduating in 1971, and he became a student leader during Brazil's repressive military dictatorship that was installed after the military coup of 1964.

Public offices held

  • Belém city alderman (Vereador) from 1967 to 1971
  • Pará state deputy (Deputado Estadual) from 1971 to 1975
  • Federal deputy of Pará (Deputado Federal) from 1975 to 1983, and from 2003 to 2010
  • Pará state governor (Governador do Pará) from 1983 to 1987 and from 1991 to 1994
  • Senator of Pará (Senador) from 1995 to 2001 and actually from 2011 on

He was also the federal minister of agrarian development and reform and of social welfare (1988–1990).

Scandals

In the 1990s, Jader was involved in several corruption scandals and risked impeachment. Facing the threat of impeachment in connection with fraud and corruption scandals, he resigned from the Senate in October 2001.

Barbalho was implicated in a funding scandal at the regional development agency the

Amazonian state of Para to influence which projects were approved by SUDAM. SUDAM was closed down in 2001 by President Fernando Henrique Cardoso because of the corruption allegations.[2]

On 22 February 2002,

Supreme Court
. The interview, which was leaked to the press, prompted Cardoso to begin sacking government appointments linked to Magalhães, most notably cabinet ministers Rodolpho Tourinho (mines and energy) and Waldeck Ornelas (social security) on 23 February.

In 2002, with public opinion favouring investigation into allegations of government corruption, the opposition sought the votes of 27 Senators and 171 Federal Deputies in Congress necessary to constitute a joint

working committee
(CPI) against Barbalho. On 8 May 2002, after the opposition had apparently secured these votes, Barbalho canceled a joint session of Congress and thereby prevented the opposition from bringing the issue to the floor. Afterward, political maneuverings persuaded enough legislators to change their minds, and the CPI threat was ended. On 16 May Saturnino Braga, the rapporteur of the Senate Ethics Committee, concluded that Magalhães and the government leader in the Senate, José Roberto Arruda of the Federal District, were guilty of having violated secrecy rules in the June 2000 vote that expelled Federal District Sen. Luis Estevão from Congress. After damaging testimony from the director of the Senate data-processing system, who stated that she broke into the voting system under orders from Magalhães and Arruda, the Senate Ethics Committee recommended the impeachment of Magalhães and Arruda for having broken Senate decorum. Rather than risk impeachment and a loss of political rights for eight years, Arruda resigned on 24 May; Magalhães followed suit on 30 May.

With Arruda and Magalhães out of office, Congress, at risk of becoming ineffectual, continued to be mired in scandal as more allegations of past corruption involving Barbalho surfaced. A growing number of investigations into fraud in the state Bank of Pará, SUDAM, and the National Land Reform Institute revealed the involvement of Barbalho when he was governor of Pará and minister of land reform. Barbalho took a leave of absence from his post as senate president on 20 July. In the face of mounting evidence and the likelihood of impeachment, he resigned from the Senate on 4 October, following the same path of Magalhães and Arruda.

References

Citations

http://g1.globo.com/to/tocantins/noticia/2013/07/justica-federal-do-condena-jader-barbalho-ressarcir-uniao.html

Other sources