Trovoada was born in
Libreville,
Gabon. He is the son of
Miguel Trovoada, who was
President of São Tomé and Príncipe from 1991 to 2001, and was named after
Patrice Lumumba, He served as the
Minister of Foreign Affairs from September 2001 to 4 February 2002. He was also oil adviser to President
Fradique de Menezes until Menezes fired him in May 2005, alleging that Trovoada had used his position to advance his business interests. Trovoada is Secretary-General of
Independent Democratic Action (ADI), a political party. On 14 February 2008, Trovoada became prime minister; he was appointed by Menezes following the resignation of
Tomé Vera Cruz. On 4 March 2008, he made a brief official visit to
Gabon. Trovoada's government was defeated in a censure motion in the National Assembly on 20 May 2008 after three months in office. The motion, introduced by the opposition
Movement for the Liberation of São Tomé and Príncipe/Social Democratic Party (MLSTP/PSD), received 30 votes in favor, 23 opposed, and two abstaining. After the
2010 parliamentary election, Trovoada returned as prime minister on 14 August 2010, but left office on 13 December 2012, after his government had lost its majority in parliament. However, the
parliamentary election of 2014 again produced a majority for Trovoada's Independent Democratic Action party, with 33 of the 55 seats in the National Assembly, and he was again appointed to head a new government. He left office in 2018. Trovoada became prime minister again in November 2022. On 6 January 2025, President
Carlos Vila Nova dismissed Trovoada and his government, citing Trovoada's prolonged absences and his government's failure to solve multiple issues. Trovoada called his dismissal "illegal" and "unconstitutional". ==References==