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José Alencar

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José Alencar Gomes da Silva
Image:1135EF118.jpg

Incumbent
Assumed office 
January 01, 2003
President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva
Preceded by Marco Maciel
Succeeded by Incumbent

Born October 17 1931 (1931-10-17) (age 76)
Flag of Brazil Muriaé, Minas Gerais
Political party PRB
Spouse Mariza Gomes
Residence Palácio do Jaburu
Website www.vice-presidencia.gov.br
For the 19th-century Brazilian author, see José de Alencar.

José Alencar Gomes da Silva (pron. IPA: [ʒo'zɛ alẽ'kax 'gomis dɐ 'siwvɐ]) (born October 17, 1931) has been the Vice President of Brazil since 2003, under president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Alencar was born into a family of small entrepreneurs from Muriaé, in the inland state of Minas Gerais on October 17, 1931, he was the eleventh son of Antônio Gomes da Silva and Dolores Peres Gomes da Silva. He started working while still a child, helping out his father in the family business, and then worked with his brothers until he became a successful businessman on his own. In 1967, Alencar founded Coteminas, one of the largest Brazilian textile companies. Before being elected for the Senate in 1998, Alencar ran for governor of Minas Gerais in 1994. While in Senate, José Alencar worked on several committees, including Economic Matters and Social Matters. In 2002 he was tapped to be Lula's running mate, in an effort to assuage worries about the then-candidate's supposed anti-business bias. He was the Honorary President of center-right Liberal Party, but left his party at the end of 2005, to associate himself with the Brazilian Republican Party. In office Alencar has often criticized his own administration for failing to lower interest rates. In November 2004 he was sworn in as Defense Minister, following the resignation of José Viegas Filho. He tried to resign on several occasions, claiming that a businessman would hardly be the best choice for running a nation's military forces. Nevertheless, President Lula convinced him to stay until March 2006, when Alencar did resign his ministerial post. Despite his disagreements with some Lula administration policies, Alencar was officially invited by Lula to once again be his running mate in the 2006 general elections. With Lula's re-election victory on October 29, Alencar secured his position as Vice President for another term.

Preceded by
Marco Maciel
Vice President of the Federative Republic of Brazil
2003-Present
Succeeded by
In Office
Preceded by
José Viegas Filho
Minister of Defence of the Federative Republic of Brazil
2004-2006
Succeeded by
Waldir Pires
Flag of Brazil
Vice-Presidents of Brazil

Floriano Peixoto | Manuel Vitorino Pereira | Francisco de Assis Rosa e Silva | Silviano Brandão | Afonso Pena | Nilo Peçanha | Venceslau Brás | Urbano Araújo | Delfim Moreira | Bueno de Paiva | Estácio Coimbra | Fernando de Melo Viana | Vital Soares | office abolished | Nereu de Oliveira | Café Filho | João Goulart | José Maria Alkmin | Pedro Aleixo | Augusto Rademaker | Adalberto Pereira dos Santos | Aureliano Chaves | José Sarney | Itamar Franco | Marco Maciel | José Alencar

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José Alencar from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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