Rogê Ferreira
José Antonio de Affonseca Rogê Ferreira was a Brazilian politician of progressive and nationalist lineage, having been an exponent of the Brazilian Socialist Party in the period before the military coup of 1964.
Biography
Early years and studies
Born in the city of São Paulo, he graduated in Law from the University of São Paulo, at the traditional Largo do São Francisco Law School. In 1948, he became president of the and, soon after, the first president of the .After his mandate, he became president of the National Union of Students, the national organization of Brazilian students, in July 1949, with a mandate until July 1950. He resigned three months before the end of his term to pursue his candidacy for state representative for the Brazilian Socialist Party. Elected, he became leader of his party's caucus.
Federal Deputy
In 1954, he was elected to the Federal deputy for São Paulo, and this time he also took over the leadership of the PSB. In he ran for mayor of São Paulo, finishing fourth.As a member of parliament, he acted in defense of workers, civil liberties and national interests. He was involved in the laws that granted job stability to pregnant women and union leaders, as well as those that regulated various professions. He was also the author of the law that regulated the profession of librarian in Brazil.
In the early hours of April 2, 1964, while the then president João Goulart, besieged by the military uprising, was still in the country, the president of the Federal Senate, Auro de Moura Andrade, in an extraordinary session declared the presidency of the Republic vacant and immediately closed the session. As he was leaving, Rogê physically assaulted Andrede with two spits, while his colleague, Tancredo Neves, called Andrade a “scoundrel, scoundrel”'.
Shortly after the establishment of the Brazilian Military Dictatorship, Rogê Ferreira had his mandate revoked and his political rights suspended by.
Resumption of political activity
After the, he returned to politics in, when he ran for governor of the state of São Paulo for the Democratic Labor Party, of which he became state president. Despite his good performance in the televised debates between the candidates, he came fifth and last in the election. In the debate promoted by TV Bandeirantes, Rogê questioned the Workers' Party candidate, [Luiz Inácio Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva|Lula da Silva|Lula], “Lula, after all, are you a socialist, a communist or a worker?” and Lula replied “I'm a lathe operator”.In these elections, despite being an opponent, he maintained good relations with the winning candidate, Franco Montoro of the Brazilian Democratic Movement Party.
In, he returned to his old party, the Brazilian Socialist Party, which had just been refunded with the end of the military dictatorship. At the end of that year, he ran for mayor of São Paulo; however, during the televised campaign, he withdrew from the race in favor of Fernando Henrique Cardoso, who would be defeated by former president Jânio Quadros.
The following year he tried to return to the Federal Chamber, whose new legislature would form the National Constituent Assembly. Despite his excellent voting record – after receiving 72,538 votes, one of the twenty-five largest in the state and one of the ten largest in the capital – he didn't get elected because the PSB didn't reach the hare quota.
From that election onwards, which would be his last, he led the regional alignment of his party, the PSB, with the São Paulo PMDB, then led by Orestes Quércia, who was elected governor. During the Quércia administration, Rogê took over the presidency of the state-owned ; in return, as president of the PSB's regional office, he announced his support for, Quércia's candidate in the. As a result, the PSB's regional office in São Paulo suffered an intervention from the PSB's national office, which had decided to support the PT's candidate, Luiza Erundina.