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Simone Tebet

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Simone Tebet
File:Simone-tebet-076.jpg
Tebet in 2022
Senator for Mato Grosso do Sul
Assumed office
1 February 2015
Preceded byMarisa Serrano
Secretary of State of Government of Mato Grosso do Sul
In office
25 April 2013 – 4 January 2014
GovernorAndré Puccinelli
Preceded byOsmar Jeronymo
Succeeded byOsmar Jeronymo
Vice Governor of Mato Grosso do Sul
In office
1 January 2011 – 31 December 2014
GovernorAndré Puccinelli
Preceded byMurilo Zauith
Succeeded byRose Modesto
Mayor of Três Lagoas
In office
1 January 2005 – 31 March 2010
Vice MayorLuiz Akira (2005–2008)
Márcia Moura (2009–2010)
Preceded byIssam Fares
Succeeded byMárcia Moura
Member of the Legislative Assembly of Mato Grosso do Sul
In office
1 February 2003 – 31 December 2004
ConstituencyAt-large
Personal details
Born
Simone Nassar Tebet

(1970-02-27) 27 February 1970 (age 54)
Três Lagoas, Mato Grosso,[a] Brazil
Political partyMDB (since 1997)
SpouseEduardo Rocha
Children2
Parent
Alma mater
ProfessionUniversity professor

Simone Nassar Tebet (Portuguese pronunciation: [siˈmoni naˈsaɾ ˈtɛbetʃi]; born 27 February 1970) is a Brazilian academic, lawyer, and politician. A member of the Federal Senate for Mato Grosso do Sul since 2015, she was previously mayor of Três Lagoas from 2005 to 2010.[1] She is a member of the Brazilian Democratic Movement Party, of which she was the leader in the Senate from 2018 to 2019.[2]

Tebet ran for President of the Senate in 2021 against Rodrigo Pacheco, who was backed by both President Jair Bolsonaro and former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's Workers' Party.[3]

Tebet was a candidate for president in the 2022 Brazilian general election, running a centrist, pragmatic, and social liberal campaign and trying revive Third Way politics, opposing both President Bolsonaro and former President Lula.[4] She said her priorities are social policies, like education, housing, and the environment.[5]

She achieved third place with 4.16% of the vote. Though she supported Lula in the second round against Bolsonaro, many suggest that she is building a platform for a more successful run in 2026, representing a disaffected center.[6][7]

Early life

Tebet was born to governor, senator, and President of the National Congress Ramez Tebet and Fairte Nassar Tebet, a philanthropist, in 1970. She is of Lebanese descent on both her mother and father's sides.[8][9]

She graduated in law from the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro and is a specialist in legal science from the Escola Superior de Magistratura, and has masters in state law from the Pontifical Catholic University of São Paulo.[10]

She began her career as a professor in 1992, working at Dom Bosco Catholic University, Anhanguera-Uniderp University, and the Federal University of Mato Grosso do Sul.[11]

Political career

Simone Tebet started her career in 2002 when she was elected as a state representative in Mato Grosso do Sul with 25,251 votes, becoming the most voted woman that year.[12] She has been described as a centre-right and centrist politician by the Brazilian media. During her presidential campaign, she said that she represents the "democratic center".[13]

Mayor of Três Lagoas

In 2004 she was elected for the first time as the first female mayor of Três Lagoas.[14]

In June 2015, an investigation implicated Tebet in diverting public resources for a fraudulent contractor while mayor of Três Lagoas. She has not faced prosecution for this.[15]

State Government

On March 31, 2010, she resigned from the mayor's office to compose André Puccinelli's ticket in the election for the government of Mato Grosso do Sul, as a candidate for vice governor. With the ticket victorious, she became the state's first female vice-governor. Between April 2013 and January 2014, Simone headed the Government Secretariat.[14]

Simone Tebet was also director of municipal affairs at the Association of Municipalities of Mato Grosso do Sul and a member of the Representative Council for the Midwest of the National Confederation of Municipalities.[14]

Federal Senate

Tebet's official Senate portrait in 2017

In the 2014 parliamentary elections, she ran for senator for Mato Grosso do Sul, being elected on October 5.[16]

Legislative Positions

In August 2016, she voted in favor of impeaching Dilma Rousseff.[14] In December of that same year, she voted in favor of the PEC do Teto dos Gastos Públicos.[17]

In October 2017, she voted in favor of maintaining the mandate of Senator Aécio Neves, overturning the decision of the First Panel of the Federal Supreme Court in the process where he is accused of corruption and obstruction of justice for requesting two million reais from businessman Joesley Batista.[18]

In June 2019, she voted against the government's Decree on Arms, which made it easier for citizens to carry and hold firearms.[19]

Simone Tebet, was sworn in as senator of her state, on February 1, 2015. In April 2018, she was chosen leader of the MDB bench in the Federal Senate. It was a position she held until January 2019.[20]

Indigenous Lands

One of the main projects defended by Simone Tebet in the Federal Senate deals with the suspension of the demarcation of indigenous lands and the payment of compensation to farmers.[21] The proposal has been criticized by human rights organizations, who point to alleged conflicts of interest, pointing out that the Senator owns a farm in Caarapó , Mato Grosso do Sul.[22][23] The municipality's recent history has been marked by violence against indigenous populations[24] which, according to a report by Cimi (Indigenist Missionary Council) would be commanded by land grabbers and landowners.[23][24]

Covaxin Investigation

Tebet spearheaded an inquiry into Covaxin fraud in the Senate.[25] She questioned the leader of a taskforce that distributed vaccines and why the contract with the Indian company was cancelled. She reportedly found 20 instances of fraud and said that the documents "should have never gone to the health ministry."[26] She also found multiple translation and formatting errors that the Chief of Staff of the Presidency Onyx Lorenzoni had seemingly ignored, along with cheaper vaccine alternatives like Pfizer and found financial error in the work of Élcio Franco, who is now under investgation by Rosa Weber, a justice of the Supreme Federal Court.[27][28] In this way, she became one of the main critics of Jair Bolsonaro's COVID-19 response.[29]

Senate Politics

Tebet in the Federal Senate in 2017

In the elections for the presidency of the Federal Senate of Brazil in 2017, Simone was a pre-candidate for president of the house. However, her party nominated Senator Eunício Oliveira to run for that position. In July 2017, the senator voted in favor of labor reform.[30]

In 2019, the senator disputed the nomination of her party for the candidacy for the presidency of the Federal Senate. However, Renan Calheiros was nominated, losing the election among his party senators by 7 votes to 5. Subsequently, Simone launched a separate candidacy for the position, but ended up withdrawing to increase the chances of a victory for Davi Alcolumbre ( DEM ) over Renan Calheiros, which eventually occurred.[31][32]

In 2019, she was elected president of the Constitution, Justice and Citizenship Commission, becoming the first woman to preside over the collegiate body.[14] It is considered the most important one in the Senate.[33]

In January 2021, she was nominated by her party to run for the Senate Presidency. However, the MDB, the party to which Tebet is affiliated, withdrew from the senator's launch to run for office, after signaling the opposing candidate, Rodrigo Pacheco. In this way, Tebet's candidacy became independent. On February 1, 2021, Rodrigo Pacheco was elected president of the Senate, with votes from 57 senators, Tebet obtained 21 votes, placing herself in second place.[14][34]

Other elections

In the 2018 elections, after the arrest of the then candidate for the state government and governor, André Puccinelli, Simone was nominated for governor, however, she later withdrew from the race due to family issues.[35]

Presidential campaign

Tebet presented herself as a candidate for the Presidency in the 2022 elections, standing on a Third Way platform. Her candiacy was seen as a non-controversial replacement to the failed pre-candidacies of João Doria and Sergio Moro, being supported by their former aides.[11]

In February, she announced economist Elena Landau as the campaign economic coordinator. Landau is known for her work in former President Fernando Henrique Cardoso's administration and for being part of LIVRES, a social liberal movement.[36]

The Brazilian Democratic Movement, in a virtual convention, officialized on 27 July 2022 the candidacy of Tebet for President. MDB is still split however, as part of some leaderships endorse Lula, but Tebet's candidacy has the support of the party's national president Baleia Rossi. Since she presented her candidacy, factions of the party in certain states like Rio Grande do Sul and Bahia said that they would not support any candidate for president from the party and endorsed former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. After talks of some MDB factions with Lula, the party published a note signed by member of 19 states endorsing senator Tebet.[37][38]

Tebet announcing Mara Gabrilli as vice-presidential candidate in 2022

The party formed a coalition with PSDB and Cidadania, nominating Mara Gabrilli, PSDB, a quadriplegic senator from São Paulo as vice president. It is the first presidential election since 1994 that the PSDB has not nominated their own candidate.[39]

On October 2, 2022, Tebet failed to reach the run-off, garnering just 4.16% of the vote.[40][41]

Platform

Simone Tebet presented her government plan on August 15, the last day for candidates to register their candidacy with the Electoral Justice. The document has 48 pages, where the presidential candidate proposes a permanent minimum income program, tax and administrative reforms and zero tolerance for illegal deforestation.[42]

Her platform has been connected to what many view as issues more important to women such as the environment and education, and with this push, Tebet has portrayed herself as the candidate for women disaffected by Bolsonaro.[43]

Results

On October 2, 2022, Tebet failed to reach the run-off, garnering just 4.16% of the vote.[40][41] She gained greater precentages in the North, South, and Southeast, especially in São Paulo, but faltered in the Northeast. However she passed Ciro Gomes to become the third place candidate and a kingmaker in the second round.

Endorsement of Lula

Tebet met with Geraldo Alckmin, Lula's running mate, on October 4, presenting her governmental plan to his and Lula's campaign. While the Brazilian Democratic Movement released its members, with Governor Ibaneis Rocha of the Federal District endorsing Bolsonaro in the second round, citing the concern for democracy, Tebet endorsed Lula.[7]

Other members of her coalition like Cidadania endorsed Lula while the PSDB and Podemos remaining neutral. Of the former presidents and presidential candidates that supported her candidacy, Fernando Henrique Cardoso and José Serra, both former supporters of Lula supported his candidacy, while Michel Temer supported Bolsonaro.

She also spoke against gun violence in South America on an Instagram post in her profile and how Lula can get rid of it by disarming the population from gun ownership and make streets of Brazil safer, and overturning right-wing gun policies.

Political positions

Women's rights

Tebet considers herself to be a feminist, saying that women's rights should not be a left-wing theme. When Tebet assumed the leadership of the feminine caucus, she said that a "feminine perspective" is necessary for policy making in areas such as healthcare, education and public transportation.[44]

In regards to women's policy, Tebet supports gender quotas for the Congress, saying that 50% is the ideal for all legislative bodies. In 2022, Tebet also pledged to have a gender balanced cabinet. Tebet opposes the legalization of abortion, but said that it should not be a political taboo.[45] As leader of the feminine caucus, she voted against criminalizing abortion in cases of rape.[11]

Tebet has lamented the classification of feminism as a leftist movement, saying in the SBT debate to Padre Kelmon, a reported priest and candidate of the PTB, that "My concept of a feminist is very different from yours. For me, being a feminist is defending women's rights. I am Catholic and I regret your selective view. I'm against abortion, and that doesn't make me any less of a feminist. Feminism in Brazil should be understood not as a leftist agenda, but as a Christian one."[46][47]

She has been criticised by some on the left for using feminism as a "prop" without supporting true feminist causes like secularism and free access to abortion while others on the right have said that her purported Christianity is a mask for a more radical feminism.[46][48] She has maintained her position to be one of Christian feminism.[49]

Experts say that feminism has various currents and movements and Tebet represents a moderate but not anti-feminist position. However some have said that given some of her more conservative policy proposals she is no more feminist than many of the other candidates.[50]

Climate and Agricultural policy

Given Mato Grosso do Sul's deep involvement with Brazil's agricultural economy, Tebet has frequently been an activist for agribusiness. However, during her campaign for president she has become a more frequent advocate for climate protections and controls. During the Globo debate she said to Bolsonaro that "Your administration is the one that made biomes, forests and my Pantanal wetlands burn. Your administration cared for miners and loggers, and protected them. You, in this regard, were the worst president in Brazil’s history."[48] She has said that she wants a "zero tolerance policy" for illegal deforestation and advocated for increases in funding in Brazil's Northeast to produce solar and wind power on unused coasts and plains. Along with these investments, she said she planned to offer carbon credits and regulate fisheries to create a more sustainable system[43]

Her policies have been described as a balance between environmental policies and pro-agriculture policies. In a visit to Montes Claros, she said that "All regions have conditions to be fertile, to produce, to generate employment and income, the north of Minas is no different. What is lacking is the political will to definitively bring a large irrigation project so that the region can produce the fruits and export, generate employment and income, finishing the dams and guaranteeing dignity for its people."[51] She has advocated for further irrigation into northern regions of Mato Grosso do Sul, where continued runoff is polluting the Amazon, and said "food needs to arrive faster and cheaper".[51]

Her policies have been criticized for emphasizing investment rather than protection, while protecting harmful farms. She has disputed these claims, connecting deforestation to drought in Brazil's agricultural states.[11][51]

Personal life

Tebet is married to Eduardo Rocha, a state deputy and secretary of government and strategic management in Mato Grosso do Sul, with whom she has two daughters, Maria Eduarda and Maria Fernanda.[20]

Tebet is Catholic.[46]

Electoral history

Year Election Party Office Coalition Partners Votes Percent Result Ref.
2002 State Elections of Mato Grosso do Sul PMDB State Deputy For Mato Grosso do Sul Front
(PMDB, PRTB, PSDB)
None 25,251 2.63% Elected [52]
2004 Três Lagoas Mayoral Election Mayor Três Lagoas United
(PMDB, PTB, PSDB, PL, PSL, PSC, PPS, PSB, PV, PTdoB)
Luiz Akira (PTB) 29,244 66.72% Elected [16]
2008 Três Lagoas Mayoral Election Mayor For the Love of Três Lagoas
(PMDB, PTB, PSDB, PL, PSL, PSC, PPS, PSB, PV, PTdoB)
Márcia Moura (PMDB) 36,228 76.81% Elected [16]
2010 Mato Grosso do Sul Gubernatorial Election Vice-Governor Love, Work, and Faith
(PRB, PMDB, PR, DEM, PMN, PSB, PSDB, PRTB, PMN, PTC, PTdoB, PTB, PPS, PTN)
André Puccinelli (PMDB) 704,407 56% Elected
1º Round
[16]
2014 State Elections of Mato Grosso do Sul Senator Mato Grosso do Sul Ever Better
(MDB, PSB, PTdoB, PSC, PHS, PRB, PRTB, PTN, PEN)
Celso Dal Lago (PMDB)
Moacir Kohl (PSB)
640,336 52.61% Elected [35]
2022 Brazilian Presidential Election President Brazil for All
(MDB, Always Forward (PSDB, Cidadania), PODE)
Mara Gabrilli (PSDB) 4,913,266 4.16% Lost [53]

Notes

  1. ^ Currently part of Mato Grosso do Sul.

References

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  2. ^ "Senador Simone Tebet". Federal Senate. Retrieved 7 August 2016.
  3. ^ "Nome do MDB na eleição do Senado, Tebet diz que buscará 'independência harmônica' do Planalto". Folha de S.Paulo (in Brazilian Portuguese). 12 January 2021. Retrieved 9 February 2022.
  4. ^ "Simone Tebet inicia pré-campanha à Presidência da República em reunião com Temer". CNN Brasil (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 9 February 2022.
  5. ^ "Pré-campanha de Simone Tebet aposta em prioridade ao social". CNN Brasil (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 9 February 2022.
  6. ^ Azedo, Luiz Carlos (27 September 2022). "Análise: A 'sombra de futuro' de Simone Tebet". Correio Braziliense (in Brazilian Portuguese). Brasilia. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
  7. ^ a b "Simone Tebet anuncia apoio a Lula às 16h; MDB libera integrantes". Valor Econômico (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 5 October 2022.
  8. ^ "Bolsonaro ainda não vestiu o terno de presidente, diz Simone Tebet". Exame (in Brazilian Portuguese). 18 August 2019. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
  9. ^ "De Temer a Haddad e Amin, políticos de origem libanesa lamentam explosão". www.bol.uol.com.br (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 1 October 2022.
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  40. ^ a b "Unpacking the results of Brazil's heated presidential election".
  41. ^ a b Harris, Bryan; Pooler, Michael; Ingizza, Carolina (3 October 2022). "Brazil election goes to second round after Bolsonaro closes gap on Lula". Financial Times. São Paulo. Retrieved 4 October 2022.
  42. ^ null. "O que propõe o plano de governo de Simone Tebet, do MDB". Gazeta do Povo (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 17 September 2022.
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  44. ^ "Simone Tebet será a primeira líder da bancada feminina". www12.senado.leg.br (in Portuguese). Retrieved 25 May 2022.
  45. ^ Central, Redação; Tebet, 18 abr 22 / 03:31 pm-A. senadora Simone; pré-c; República, idata à presidência da; tabu”. “Particularmente, disse ser cristã e contra o aborto Mas defendeu os casos em que o aborto não é penalizado no Brasil e afirmou que o assunto “não pode ser; qu, acho que a Constituição Federal foi muito feliz; Estupro, O. Disse Que O. Aborto É Permitido Nos Casos De; E, Nos Casos Em Que a Mulher Está Com Sua Vida Ameaçada; agora. "Simone Tebet se diz contra o aborto, mas quer que assunto não seja tabu". www.acidigital.com. Retrieved 25 May 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
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  47. ^ "A 'aula' de Simone Tebet sobre feminismo no Debate VEJA | VEJA Gente". VEJA (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 1 October 2022.
  48. ^ a b "Brazil's decisive debate on eve of presidential election". WGNO. 30 September 2022. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
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  50. ^ Povo, Giulia Fontes, especial para a Gazeta do. "Simone Tebet: como o feminismo entra na campanha da candidata?". Gazeta do Povo (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 1 October 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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