Sarney Filho

José Sarney Filho, better known as Zequinha Sarney (born June 14, 1957) is a Brazilian lawyer and politician, current Secretary of Environment of the Brazilian Federal District.[1] He is son of the former senator and former president of Brazil José Sarney and brother of Roseana Sarney and Fernando Sarney. On May 12, 2016, Sarney was appointed by Michel Temer, Minister of Environment.

Sarney Filho
Federal Deputy from Maranhão
Assumed office
February 1, 1983
Minister of Environment
In office
May 12, 2016  April 6, 2018
PresidentMichel Temer
Preceded byIzabella Teixeira
Succeeded byEdson Duarte
In office
January 1, 1999  March 5, 2002
PresidentFernando Henrique Cardoso
Preceded byGustavo Krause
Succeeded byJosé Carlos Carvalho
State Deputy of Maranhão
In office
February 1, 1979  February 1, 1983
Personal details
Born
José Sarney Filho

(1957-06-14) June 14, 1957
São Luís, MA
Political partyPV (2005–present)
PFL (1985–2005)
PDS (1980–1985)
ARENA (1970–1980)
Children4 (including Adriano Sarney)
MotherMarly Sarney
FatherJosé Sarney
ProfessionLawyer

Biography

Born into a family closely linked to politics, José Sarney Filho is the son of José Sarney and Marly Sarney. His father was the fifth senator and was president of the Republic between 1985 and 1990. He is also the brother of the former governor of Maranhão, Roseana Sarney, and the businessman Fernando Sarney.

Political career

José Sarney Filho began his career in public life at a young age by the National Renewal Alliance (ARENA) in 1970. He was elected a state deputy for Maranhão in 1978 and moved to the Social Democratic Party (PDS) and was elected for his first term as a federal deputy in 1982. On the occasion of the presidential succession at the end of the João Figueiredo administration, he left the party in 1986 and joined the Liberal Front Party (PFL), now Democrat (DEM), and was reelected in 1986, 1990, 1994, 1998, and 2002.

He retired from his mandate to hold the positions of Secretary for Political Affairs of the State of Maranhão in 1988 and from 1989 to 1990 and Minister of Environment in the government of Fernando Henrique Cardoso between January 1, 1999 and March 5, 2002, following the breakup of his party with the government.

Since 2005, he has been affiliated with the Green Party (PV) and has been re-elected in 2006, 2010 and 2014, being one of his main leaders in the National Congress and being in his ninth consecutive term.

In May 2016, he again assumed the position of Minister of the Environment, in the interim government of Michel Temer.

Personal life

From his first marriage with Lucialice Cordeiro, José Sarney Filho had three children: José Adriano and the twins Marcos and Gabriel. His fourth son, Daniel Sarney, lives in Canada with his mother, the anthropologist Annette Leibing. Currently, Sarney Filho is married to Camila Serra, mother of his fifth and last son, João José Sarney, born in 2006.

Controversies

In one of the investigations of Operation Lava Jato, in June 2016, former Senator Sérgio Machado, in terms of an award-winning demarcation, pointed out that he passed on former President José Sarney, according to him, 2.25 million reais per Means of legal electoral donations, including 400,000 reais for the Green Party of Maranhão. Even without being accused by Sérgio Machado, some press vehicles assume that the supposed indication for the legal donation to the Green Party of Maranhão would be for the federal deputy campaign of Sarney Filho in 2010, when the same belonged to the PV. Sarney Filho is not investigated in the Lava Jet.

gollark: Subsidies, maybe, or at least taxes on carbon-y fuel stuff.
gollark: and no stupid antinuclear hysteria, we would be better off.
gollark: If there was more research, less problematic government meddling with nuclear, snd
gollark: Yes, nuclear plants are veeeeery expensive to build for whatever reason.
gollark: Of course, if you run a vast network of superconducting cables around the entire planet, you can just get solar power from wherever *is* lit up!

References

Government offices
Preceded by
Gustavo Krause
Minister of Environment
1999–2002; 2016–2018
Succeeded by
José Carlos Carvalho
Preceded by
Izabella Teixeira
Succeeded by
Edson Duarte
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