Geisel assumed office after promising a "slow, gradual and secure"
political opening in order to meet the demands of organized civil society without interrupting the regime. During his administration, there were fewer complaints about the death, torture and disappearance of political prisoners and confrontation with the
hardline, a group opposed to the government's directives.
Institutional Act Number Five was used to decree federal intervention in
Rio Branco in 1975 after the MDB councillors refused to ratify the mayoral nominee and to remove some parliamentarians from office. AI-5 was progressively replaced by "constitutional safeguards". In the campaign for the
1974 elections, MDB candidates won sixteen of the twenty-two seats in the
Federal Senate and increased their representation in the
Chamber of Deputies and the Legislative Assemblies. Fearing that this would happen again, in 1978 the government sanctioned the , which only allowed candidates' CVs to be read out during election time on radio and television. On 8 April 1977, the
Pacote de Abril (
English: April Package) was approved and included an increase in the presidential term from five to six years, the creation of the two-year senator, the maintenance of indirect elections for governor and an increase in the number of federal deputies in the states where the government had a majority. The measures prompted criticism from the opposition, but ensured the election of General João Figueiredo as Geisel's successor on 15 October 1978. The Institutional Act Number 5 was revoked on 31 December that year. After the deaths of journalist
Vladmir Herzog and worker
Manuel Fiel Filho in the
DOI-CODI, also known as
DOPS, between October 1975 and January 1976, the government was forced to curb the actions of the hardliners. This culminated in the replacement of General
Sylvio Frota by General Fernando Belfort Bethlem in the Ministry of the Army, as a result of criticism of the High Command of the Armed Forces and the General Command of the National Information System (SNI) for allowing infiltrators to destroy important files on the premises of regional organizations. The measure represented a victory against the "radical" sectors of the
Armed Forces. The Geisel government also experienced bomb attacks on the
Brazilian Press Association, the
Order of Attorneys of Brazil, the
Brazilian Centre for Analysis and Planning and the residence of journalist
Roberto Marinho. During the Geisel government, the states of Rio de Janeiro and Guanabara merged, the state of Mato Grosso do Sul was created and former presidents
Eurico Gaspar Dutra,
Ranieri Mazzilli,
Juscelino Kubitschek and
João Goulart died. == Society ==