File:Pedro Ivo e Ulysses Guimarães.webp

Pedro_Ivo_e_Ulysses_Guimarães.webp(800 × 564 pixels, file size: 24 KB, MIME type: image/webp)

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Português: Nascido em Florianópolis, filho de família tradicional, ingressou na Escola de Cadetes de Porto Alegre aos 17 anos. Cursou a famosa Academia Militar de Agulhas Negras e, formado, foi destacado para o 23º Batalhão de Caçadores de Joinville.

Esta designação mudou sua vida. Conheceu e casou-se com dona Mariza Lobo, filha do principal líder do PTB no norte, o deputado e senador Rodrigo Lobo.

Disputou pelo PTB três vezes a Prefeitura de Joinville na década de 60, perdendo para Nilson Bender e Harald Karmann, e vencendo a última em 1972, já exercendo mandato de deputado federal.

Na polêmica eleição de 1982 perdeu a vaga do senado para Jorge Bornhausen, do PDS, por apenas 1.439 votos.

Assumiu a presidência do Diretório do PMDB em 1983, exerceu a presidência da Telesc com a implantação da Nova República de Tancredo Neves. E, em 1986, derrotou Vilson Kleinubing, e colocou o partido na Chefia do Executivo.

Permaneceu no governo apenas dois anos, abatido por um câncer que o atormentou por muito tempo. Enfrentou greves de professores, oposição consistente na Assembleia e, sobretudo, os problemas de saúde. Faleceu em 1990 com apenas 60 anos.

Pedro Ivo Campos deixou como legado a imagem de um prefeito realizador, de sensibilidade social e projetos marcantes em Joinville.

No governo, como na vida pública, foi considerado, até por adversários, como um político coerente e um ”coronel democrata”.
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Source https://ndmais.com.br/politica-brasileira/pedro-ivo-campos-91-da-caserna-ao-governo-de-sc/
Author NDMAIS

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Public domain
This work is in the public domain both in Brazil and in the United States because it was first published in Brazil (and not published in the U.S. within 30 days) and if it was copyrightable, it was first published before 1 March 1989 without complying with U.S. copyright formalities, such as copyright notice and it is one of the following:

  • A work whose author died before 1936;
  • An anonymous work or a work deemed to be anonymous, or a work by a collective person whose authors were not individually identified, published or disclosed before 1936;
  • Photographic works not considered to be "artistic creations" produced before 20 June 1998. (Includes documentary photography in general (commercial or not), as well as non-artistic photographic portraits. See here for some guidance on this);
  • Cinematographic, phonographic, photographic and applied arts works completed before 1936.


For background information, see the explanations on Non-U.S. copyrights.
As of 1 January 1996, were in the public domain in Brazil: Works whose author died before 1936; anonymous works, works deemed to be anonymous, or works by a collective person whose authors were not individually identified, first published or disclosed before 1936; all photographic works, and works deemed to be photographic works, which by choice of object and execution conditions couldn't be considered an artistic creation; work published or commissioned by a Brazilian government (federal, state, or municipal) prior to 1983; cinematographic, phonographic, photographic and applied arts works completed before 1936. Non artistic photographs continued entering the public domain until 20 June 1998 (not included), when Law 9.610 came into effect, 120 days after publication (pub. 20 Feb 1998).

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current23:56, 4 September 2022Thumbnail for version as of 23:56, 4 September 2022800 × 564 (24 KB)Przelijpdahl (talk | contribs)Uploaded a work by NDMAIS from https://ndmais.com.br/politica-brasileira/pedro-ivo-campos-91-da-caserna-ao-governo-de-sc/ with UploadWizard

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