Alignment of forces Governor's definition After Jânio Quadros' resignation, both the Military Brigade and the 3rd Army occupied strategic points in Porto Alegre, in some cases at odds with each other. Street demonstrations broke out, at first for Jânio's return. Machado Lopes reprimanded general Peri Constant Bevilacqua, commander of the 3rd Infantry Division (3rd DI) in
Santa Maria, who had sent a telegram to Jânio asking him to reconsider the resignation. Governor Brizola, at first, interpreted the resignation as a coup against Jânio and thought about inviting him to resist in his state. However, on the morning of 26 August he was informed through the labor deputy from Rio Grande do Sul, Rui Ramos, that the Minister of War would not allow Goulart to enter the country and take office. That day a manifesto was defined. Dating back to the beginning of the crisis, it still paid attention to Jânio's resignation, while addressing the "military solution" to the succession in a generic way, but making clear its "unalterable position on the side of constitutional legality"; "We will not collude with coups or violence against the constitutional order and against public liberties". It clarified that "the environment in the State is one of order". It also mentioned maintaining contact with military personnel. The first was general Machado Lopes. Brizola tried to convince him in favor of Goulart's inauguration, but the 3rd Army commander limited himself to answering: "governor, I can't compromise myself like that. I am a soldier and I stay with the army". After the call, the governor told his aides that "nobody will make the coup by telephone!" Brizola contacted several military personnel around the country. In Rio de Janeiro he spoke with Osvino Ferreira Alves, who could do nothing: Osvino had no troops and was targeted for his nationalist positions.
Amaury Kruel, also with no command of troops, accepted the call to Porto Alegre, where he could take Machado Lopes' place if the 3rd Army remained opposed to the governor. Several important officers refused to break with the military ministers, such as Costa e Silva in Recife. However, Brizola managed to contact Lott before he was arrested, and received recommendations from allies in Rio Grande do Sul: generals Bevilacqua, from the 3rd DI, and Oromar Osório, from the 1st Cavalry Division (1st DC) in
Uruguaiana, as well as colonels Roberto Osório and Assis Brasil. Besides Santa Maria and Uruguaiana, contacts were extended to commanders in
Santana do Livramento,
Cruz Alta and other cities in the interior. With military allies and popular demonstrations in Porto Alegre for Goulart's inauguration, Brizola was able to start his Legality Campaign. Through the Farroupilha and Guaíba radios, at three in the morning of 27 August he declared himself ready to defend the constitutional succession with force: {{Blockquote By this point the civilians in the
Piratini Palace had received
Taurus 38 revolvers. The Military Brigade distributed its armaments: soldiers and corporals with carbines and
INA submachine guns, sergeants with carbines 30 and officers with
Colt 45 pistols. Brizola personally wielded a submachine gun. Other weapons of the Military Brigade were the Schwarzlose machine gun, the Ceskoslovenzká Zbrojovka (FMZB) machine gun, and the Royal automatic pistol. Some of the armaments had been waiting in the stocks since the government of , in the 1930s, and were of dubious reliability. For the last time in history, the Military Brigade was structured as a combat unit. At the time, it had combat and guerrilla training, without the focus on
ostensible policing. Its officers were still military-minded and enthusiastically embraced a return to their original
state army role. Brizola also asked Taurus for three thousand 38 revolvers. The Telephone Company was militarily occupied and
Varig's air transport was brought under control. A "state of collective exaltation" emerged in Rio Grande do Sul, with much of the population in the streets, especially around the Piratini Palace. Many volunteered to defend the state government. In the Mata-borrão exhibition hall, located on the corner of the Borges de Medeiros and Andrade Neves avenues, the "Central Committee of the Movement of Democratic Resistance" was established, unifying dozens of committees. Until the night of 30 August it had about 45,000 volunteers. The civilian population made its vehicles available for the cause, forming the "legality fleet". In the interior of the state legalist committees had thousands of volunteers. The
air clubs patrolled the border with their small planes. The Allied Hotel was made available to serve as a hospital for combatants, volunteers donated blood and women presented themselves as nursing auxiliaries. Meanwhile, Machado Lopes informed the Ministry of War of the situation by radio. At 01:20 he reported that the situation was "tense but calm": Brizola would resist against any impediment to João Goulart's inauguration, he had mobilized the Military Brigade and had part of the officialdom on his side, including the commanders of the 1st DC and 3rd DI. At 03:04 Odílio Denys answered, reporting Lott's arrest and ordering the two legalist division commanders in Porto Alegre to be detained. At 03:10 Machado Lopes replied: "Understood, I'll do it. [The] situation [in] Porto Alegre [is] very tense. Governor Brizola has organized a palace defense and seems to have distributed civilian arms to his supporters. I am vigilant in maintaining order. It would all be convenient to find a legal solution."
Legality Chain Brizola's speech precipitated events, turning his state into the center of resistance against the military ministers. In response, the Minister of War ordered the crystals of several radio stations in Porto Alegre to be sealed, leading to the federal government's closing down of the Capital, Farroupilha, and radio stations, which broadcast the governor's manifestos. Brizola officially reacted by requisitioning Rádio Guaíba, which was occupied at noon on 27 August by a Civil Guard riot squad armed with machine guns. The radio station became available to the Secretariat of Security and the studios were transferred to the Piratini Palace itself. The transmitters on Ilha da Pintada were protected by two hundred men from the Military Brigade, including three heavy machine guns, and Fire Department speedboats. Engineer Homero Simon connected the lines from the Piratini basements to Ilha da Pintada. 150 other radio stations in the state, country and abroad were united in the
Cadeia Radiofônica da Legalidade (Legality Radio Chain), broadcasting speeches on shortwave. To defeat the military ministers, popular and military support in Rio Grande do Sul was insufficient, and so the Legality Chain was the instrument needed to mobilize the rest of the country. Under orders from the Minister of War, twice the 3rd Army planned operations to silence the Legality Chain, but in both Machado Lopes gave up the execution. According to journalist , general , Chief of Staff of the 3rd Army, thought of an amphibious attack, but during reconnaissance the discovery of a machine gun aimed at the river by the defenders made the plan unfeasible. In Murici's own statement, the only mention of a discarded plan is that of cutting the bridge's electrical wiring and keeping a platoon in place. The south of Rio Grande do Sul would be left without electricity, but the radio would be silenced. He presented the plan to Machado Lopes, who rejected it. The land invasion, on the other hand, went further. It would be executed by a force from the Guard Company, a unit specialized in rapid assaults and armed with submachine guns. Around midnight on 27 August, Machado Lopes called his commander, captain Pedro Américo Leal, and ordered him to remove the crystal from the Guaíba radio transmitter. The captain argued against the operation, as it would incur casualties, and suggested cutting off the city's electricity, water, and telephone as an alternative in order to take over the radio in the morning, but Machado Lopes insisted. At dawn the company was called, but Machado Lopes changed his mind and canceled the operation. Colonel Emílio Nerme, Brizola's sub-chief of the Military Cabinet, evaluated that the attack would fail against the experienced Military Brigade. For Pedro Américo, it would succeed, but with casualties, since the enemy would be on the defense. For Murici, a violent clash would occur with victory for the army, since the unit would be outnumbered, but with a firepower advantage.
Orders against Brizola On 27 August, the Military Brigade was mobilized. The Piratini Palace and its surroundings – the
Metropolitan Cathedral of Porto Alegre, the
Farroupilha Palace and
Matriz Square – dawned fortified by the brigade, with sandbags, rolls of barbed wire, machine guns, including on the roof of the palace and the cathedral's tower, and trucks bringing armaments. Thousands of people were in the square. The telephony was non-secret and the state government and the 3rd Army were able to monitor each other's calls. On the afternoon of 27 August, a Post and Telegraph employee picked up the following radio message, sent by Murici from the 3rd Army HQ to Ernesto Geisel, in Brasília: Still on Sunday, the commander of the 5th Air Zone, brigadier João Aureliano Passos, informed Machado Lopes of the order received from the Minister of Aeronautics: to fly low over the Piratini Palace to intimidate Brizola and silence the Legality Chain. Passos refused to carry out the order. At 05:00 on Monday, he appeared at the 3rd Army HQ, where he explained that the flight could agitate the population, provoking a civil war. At 09:45 the 3rd Army received the following message by radio: Machado Lopes replied, "I only fulfill orders within the current Constitution". Orlando Geisel asked "how is this order unconstitutional?", but the 3rd Army commander had already left the station. Later, Orlando and Ernesto Geisel denied the existence of the order, and there is no document in the Army archives. According to Machado Lopes, the absence of the document is expected from a radio order, but it had five witnesses. Among them, Murici confirmed that Denys' order was "Use the aviation, going as far as bombing if necessary"; he emphasized that they were two separate orders, one from minister Grün Moss and one from minister Denys. The fear of the bombing of the Piratini Palace involved a confusion between the two orders. His assistant, major Schnarndorf, claimed that there was an order to use force against the palace. According to the head of the Communications Service, Álcio Barbosa da Costa e Silva, the order was "Take the Piratini Palace, arrest governor Brizola, resorting to bombing, if necessary". Costa e Silva added that Orlando Geisel condemned the requisition of the radio stations for the Legality Chain, because "the granting power is the Federal Government".
Confrontation with the 3rd Army The
archbishop of Porto Alegre,
Vicente Scherer, and mayor asked the 3rd Army to avoid conflict. The mayor, an enemy of Goulart, mentioned: "I think the best thing is to give investiture to Jango, because he is a coward. He takes over and then, depending on what he does, he overthrows himself". From midnight on, the Piratini Palace prepared for an imminent attack by federal forces. From 02:30 on 28 August, the creaking of the tracks of the 3rd Army tanks could be heard in Porto Alegre. The 2nd Mechanized Reconnaissance Regiment had its armored cars on the Mauá and Praia das Belas avenues. In the legalist trenches was the Bento Gonçalves Regiment, responsible for the security of the Piratini Palace, reinforced by other detachments, totaling 300 men from the Military Brigade under colonel Átila Escobar. The civilians were also armed, and trucks, jeeps and official cars blocked the streets. Despite the military inferiority compared to the 3rd Army, there was a will to resist. Piratini realized the War Minister's order for the attack on the state government at the same time it was informed that general Machado Lopes wanted to visit it to negotiate. The pressure reached its peak. Before the visit, which took place around 11:00, Brizola went to the microphone and spoke on the radio chain. Announcing the coming of Machado Lopes, he stated what would happen if the general informed him of his deposition: As for Odílio Denys' statement that the choice was between communism and democracy, Brizola said: "We have nothing with the Russians. But we also have nothing with the Americans, who plunder and keep our homeland in poverty, illiteracy and misery". According to him, Denys would only be able to impose his will by causing chaos and dictatorship, and then "In the cities of the interior the guerrillas will arise for the defense of honor and dignity, against what a mad and senseless man is wanting to impose on the Brazilian family". He read Denys' orders about the movements of the army, air force and navy against his government. However, for him the bloody outcome could still be avoided, depending on what Machado Lopes and the "humble sergeant" would do. The Military Brigade would also operate in the interior. For example, the
Carazinho garrison would attack the army barracks in
Passo Fundo to get armaments, requiring, however, an action to delay the neighboring army force in
Cruz Alta, with civilian participation. The brigade had 13,000 men, and the 3rd Army, 40,000. The army had in the capital the Guards Company, the 6th
Army Police Company, a fraction of the 3rd Light Combat Car Battalion, brought from Santa Maria, the 18th Infantry Regiment, the 2nd Mechanized Reconnaissance Regiment, and an engineer battalion. An artillery group and the 19th Infantry Regiment were nearby in
São Leopoldo. The 18th and 19th Regiments were two battalions. In addition, each cavalry division had sent a squadron to Porto Alegre because of the
7 September parade. Among them was a squadron of general Oromar Osório, that arrived in the capital in trains and trucks provided by the state government and would be a factor in its favor. For Murici, with these forces it would be possible to crush Rio Grande do Sul's government in Porto Alegre, but this would risk a civil war. A big problem was the loss of cohesion in the 3rd Army, which was weakened by Brizola's psychological warfare, with soldiers, sergeants and even the lower ranks (lieutenants) falling under the influence of the Legality Chain. Furthermore, to fulfill the order from the Minister of War, Machado Lopes would need to confront, in addition to the Military Brigade and civilian volunteers, the 3rd DI and the 1st DC, which already had legalist commanders, demanding operations against Santa Maria and Santiago. Besides these, the 3rd Army had two more cavalry divisions (2nd and 3rd) and an infantry division (6th), and another infantry division (5th) in Paraná. The 1st DC was the strongest among the cavalry, although it did not reach the power of the 3rd or 6th DIs.
Definition of Machado Lopes Brizola imagined that the III Army commander's audience would be to inform him that "already the power is taken up there" and advise him to resign. For his part, Machado Lopes hoped to "request from the State Governor the necessary measures so that he would moderate the acts of revolutionary exaltation that he had been practicing, including the return of Rádio Guaíba". However, the general endorsed the legalist cause, agreeing with the governor on the necessity of Goulart's inauguration and thus breaking with his superior, the Minister of War. The decision was difficult for Machado Lopes, attached to the hierarchy, but made easier by the influence of his subordinates who were already legalists, the recognition that they would become enemies if Denys was obeyed, the insurrection that would be unleashed, the absurdity of the order to attack the Gaucho government, and the popular support that would be faced. According to some statements, the decision was not a personal one, but one made jointly with the General Staff and most of the officers. It occurred despite political-ideological differences with Brizola: the general was anti-communist and conservative-Christian, with a profile loyal to military discipline. The press avoided characterizing the alliance between the III Army and Brizola with the term "adhesion," and an edition of Última Hora with the word was withdrawn from circulation. There was tension and an effort to maintain a distance, which is visible in his memoirs, in which he insisted that "I never adhered to Governor Leonel Brizola" and that Legality had the support of the political parties, all social classes, and the clergy. Murici went to Rio de Janeiro to negotiate. When he returned, on the 29th, he tried to avoid a split within the army and reverse his commander's decision, without success. Since Murici would have to be arrested if he remained in Porto Alegre, he was released to go to Rio de Janeiro. "As long as I was out of the 3rd Army, I would be free, even to fight it." That same day Machado Lopes was called to Brasília, but announced that he would not obey the Minister of War, would remain in Rio Grande do Sul and would act on his own. The next day a decree named Osvaldo Cordeiro de Farias the new commander of the 3rd Army, but Machado Lopes made it clear that he would be arrested if he landed in Porto Alegre. Cordeiro de Farias resigned himself to setting up headquarters in Guanabara. At noon on the 28th, Machado Lopes transmitted a message to the units subordinate to the III Army: "I communicate that having received an order from Mr. Minister, intermediate General Geisel, that would imply the outbreak of civil war, I declared that I would not comply and, from this moment on, as commander III Army, I would only comply with legal orders within the Constitution in force." Some officers' testimonies emphasize that their units' participation followed the hierarchy, with subordinates, even if of a different opinion, following their legalistic commanders. The legalist position was not unanimous within the Third Army. Besides Murici's rejection, there is mention of the refusal of a large part of the officers of the 19th Infantry Regiment to participate and, in
Bagé, the 8th Cavalry Regiment and the 4th Horse Artillery Group were on opposite sides. In Florianopolis the Army garrison transferred its allegiance to the local Navy command, which was not legalistic. The officers of the 18th Infantry Regiment were still loyal to the military ministers, and the regiment only participated after the insubordination of the legalist sergeants. It was a large and relevant unit, based in Porto Alegre.
Society The Legality Campaign was embraced by broad sectors of the gaucho society: the state government, Military Brigade, III Army, political figures, unionists, workers and students. The common cause united the state government with the intransigent opposition from the Libertarian Party and the sports rivals
Grêmio and
Internacional.
Catholics and
Umbandistas participated on the same side. Transport workers, seamen, railroad workers, construction workers, metalworkers, high school students, bank workers and nurses formed the popular and workers' battalions. Those who agreed or were neutral to the military ministers' coup were relatively silent, but such positions also had their sectors in society. Throughout the early 1960s there were forces opposed to Goulart in the
clergy, officials, the Federation of Industries (FIERGS), the Federation of Commercial Associations (FEDERASUL) and the Federation of Agriculture (FARSUL). The federations were part of a political culture of associativism as an instrument to defend the interests of these classes. This opposition had as its discourse the threat represented by the exogenous force of atheistic communism to the social and political order and the endogenous democratic and Christian ideology. Among the Gaucho politicians opposed to legality was
Paulo Brossard. Última Hora from Porto Alegre, a Getulista newspaper and Goulart supporter, still did not always take a favorable line to Brizola, but "the differences were put totally aside and Brizola ended up being heroicized and canonized (...) as the leader of the movement". The Globo Magazine also gave enthusiastic support. The conservative Correio do Povo sought distance from Brizola, but was not against the constitutional solution.
Working class While much is said about the leadership role assumed by the governor of Rio Grande do Sul,
Leonel Brizola, little emphasis is given to the role of the popular classes in the struggle for legality. In parallel with Brizola's charismatic figure, the working classes and unions played a crucial role, both during the campaign and for the outcome it had. On the same day that Brizola begins to hear rumors of a coup, the calls a meeting to decide how to act in the face of the situation that presented itself. Under the leadership of the Porto Alegre Trade Union Command a march begins on the afternoon of August 25, with some 5,000 demonstrators, among workers and students, who gather at the Largo da Prefeitura of Porto Alegre and walk to the Piratini Palace. The demonstrators wanted to ensure Goulart's inauguration, and thus formed an alliance between the working class and students. The heart of the workers' legalist resistance were the Resistance Committees. These committees made possible "the recruitment of volunteers to be used in any eventuality [...] The committee, in addition, held marches; organized rallies and lectures; made posters alluding to the movement and had a service of collecting funds for the resistance". Just as Brizola started the Legality network, with the intention of spreading the news about the resistance, the Resistance Committees also used the media as allies; the newspaper "Resistance" circulated among the committees with the most recent news. The workers were also ready to join a general strike, just waiting for the signal from the Communist Party and the trade unions, but for strategic reasons the strike did not take place. However, it was decided to create the Unified Trade Union Command, with José César de Mesquita, a trade unionist for the Metalworkers of Porto Alegre, as president. The mobilization for democratic resistance within the labor movement was very strong, making clear the commitment of the working class in the speech of the communist councilman from the
Republican Party, Marino dos Santos: "From here on this rostrum making my pronouncement I call on all the workers to organize themselves, to go to their factories to explain to their colleagues that what is being struck is the right to live decently in Brazil; that what is being struck is the right of Brazilians to dream of a better future; that what is being struck is the right of a free and sovereign Nation that has its head held high in the concert of nations. It is enough that the proletariat is organized, that it closes and crosses its arms not giving these fascists that from the cassock to the quepi, from the bread they eat to the roof that shelters them, is created by the work of the Brazilian people, is created by the work and the sweat of the farmers, to whom they deny the right of self-determination. So let them stop working, let them not give a grain of wheat, an hour of work, in a regime that is not one of freedom and citizen's rights enjoy the guarantees of the Constitution." The workers were ready for the fight, and it was they who widened the lines in the streets, clamoring for the Constitution to be respected. However, the figure that stood out was Leonel Brizola, who, realizing the growth of the workers in the streets, tried to control the direction of the resistance. The then governor of Rio Grande do Sul tried to build himself a figure of a "hero", of a "providential man", moving "so that he would not have to share this condition with many other leaderships, especially the workers' leaderships that aimed to disassociate the union movement from any kind of paternalism". ==Legality in Paraná==