At 15:00 on 3 November 1930, the Provisional Military Junta transferred power to Getúlio Vargas at the
Catete Palace, marking the end of the First Republic. In his inaugural speech, Vargas outlined 17 goals to be pursued by the Provisional Government. At the same time, in
downtown Rio de Janeiro, Rio Grande do Sul soldiers fulfilled their symbolic promise of tying their horses to the obelisk on Central Avenue (now
Rio Branco Avenue), marking the triumph of the revolution. Among the major
tenentist leaders of 1930,
João Cabanas was the only one present at the ceremony. In a speech thanking the people of Minas Gerais for their support in
Belo Horizonte on 23 February 1931, Vargas acknowledged the primacy of Antônio Carlos Ribeiro de Andrada as the first politician to sense that a revolution was imminent. Vargas also credited Antônio Carlos as the one who launched his presidential candidacy: Vargas became head of the Provisional Government with broad powers. The revolutionaries did not accept the title "President of the Republic". His provisional government was the second in the history of republican Brazil—the first being that of
Deodoro da Fonseca. Vargas ruled by decree, and these held the force of law, unbound by a Constitution. On 11 November 1930, Decree No. 19.398 was issued, establishing and regulating the operations of the Provisional Government. This decree: • Suspended the constitutional guarantees of the
1891 Constitution, except for
habeas corpus in cases of common crimes; • Confirmed the dissolution of the
National Congress of Brazil, the state legislatures, and
municipal councils. The deputies, senators, and state governors elected in 1930 never took office; • Validated all acts of the Provisional Military Junta; • Authorized Getúlio Vargas to freely appoint and dismiss
interventores (federal appointees) to govern the states—mostly
tenentists who had participated in the revolution; • Excluded from judicial review all acts of the Provisional Government and those of the federal
interventores in the states. Thus, no act or decree of the Provisional Government or the interventores could be challenged in Brazilian courts; • The actions of the federal
interventores were regulated, under the Provisional Government, by the so-called
Código dos Interventores (Interventors' Code)—Decree No. 20.348, dated 29 August 1931—which created consultative councils in the states, the Federal District, and the municipalities, and laid out rules for local administration. Officers of the armed forces who remained loyal to the deposed government had their careers abruptly ended—they were forcibly retired from active duty by decree. In the
Supreme Federal Court, in February 1931, six justices who had supported the deposed government were compulsorily retired, and the number of justices was reduced from fifteen to eleven. Even in the
Brazilian Navy, which had not fought against the 1930 revolutionaries, forced retirements were carried out at Vargas' insistence, prompting the Minister of the Navy, Isaías de Noronha, to resign. The administrations and politicians of the First Republic were thoroughly investigated through a so-called "Revolutionary Justice" and a "Special Tribunal", both created in 1930 by the decree that established the Provisional Government, and organized by Decree No. 19.440, dated 28 November 1930, whose purpose was the "prosecution and judgment of political, administrative, and other crimes to be specified in its organizational law".
Juarez Távora, in addition to being Minister of Transportation and later Minister of Agriculture, was secretly appointed, by classified decree filed at the
Ministry of War, as head of a "Northern Delegation", giving him control over all federal
interventores in the Northeast. This earned him the nickname "Viceroy of the North". The political radicalization of the
tenentes posed the greatest threat to Vargas on 25 February 1932, when an opposition newspaper,
Diário Carioca, was destroyed in Rio de Janeiro (another case of
empastelamento). Vargas' refusal to punish the
tenentes involved in the case led to the resignation of Labor Minister
Lindolfo Collor, Justice Minister Maurício Cardoso, and Chief of Police João Batista Luzardo. João Neves da Fontoura also broke ties with Vargas. Luzardo, in a letter, denounced the Provisional Government's involvement in the attack on
Diário Carioca. In solidarity, Rio de Janeiro's newspapers stopped publishing for two days. The ministerial cabinet of the Provisional Government, composed of only nine members (seven civilians and two military officers), was carefully assembled to reward all the three main states, political parties (the
Liberator Party, the
PRR, the
PRM, the Paraíba Republican Party, and the
Democratic Party),
tenentes, and the Provisional Military Junta, who together had led the Revolution of 1930. Vargas' major difficulty with the
tenentes in the states—besides the rivalries among them—was their lack of preparation for governance. With few exceptions, such as
Juracy Magalhães, the
tenentes performed poorly as administrators. Their performance was described in February 1932, four months before the outbreak of the
Constitutionalist Revolution, by lieutenant João Cabanas, one of the leaders of the
São Paulo Revolt of 1924 and a revolutionary in 1930. In his book
Fariseus da Revolução ("Pharisees of the Revolution"), he criticized lieutenant
João Alberto Lins de Barros, who had governed São Paulo from 1930 to 1931, as well as the other federal
interventores in the states. The conflict with the revolutionary left, which included many military officers and would later intensify, began early in the Provisional Government: On 22 January 1931, a subversive plot was uncovered within the labor unions in
Santos and Rio de Janeiro. Among those arrested was the young
Carlos Lacerda. Because of this incident, the May Day parade of 1931 was suspended. == Constitutional government (1934–1937) ==