Campaign In
2016, Marchezan Júnior became a candidate for mayor in Porto Alegre as part of the
Forward Porto Alegre, made up of the PSDB,
PP,
PMB, and
PTC, his vice-mayoral candidate being lawyer Gustavo Paim (
PP). In the second round, his candidacy also received the support of the
PTB,
PSC,
PR,
SD,
PRP,
PTdoB, and
PV. During the campaign, he defended the idea that, if he were to win, part of the reason as to why would have been due to the decision by the national president of his party,
Aécio Neves. Neves intervened in the state branch in 2015 and barred the group led by former governor
Yeda Crusius, nominating Marchezan Júnior as president of the state branch, which permitted his run for mayor. He was elected in the second round with 402,165 votes, which represented 60.5% of valid votes, defeating opponent
Sebastião Melo (
PMDB). His campaign was supported by groups such as the
Free Brazil Movement and business owners. With this victory, Marchezan Júnior became the first mayor of Porto Alegre from the PSDB.
2017 After his election, Marchezan Júnior announced that he would curt the number of municipal government agencies from 37 to 23, the lowering of the number of secretaries from 29 to 15, and the firing of 340 commissioned positions, a number that had increased for many years, had come to be just 5.5% more or even less than the prior administration in May 2019. He also created a database for the selection of commissioned positions, such as how many public servants had been nominated by political parties, called the Banco de Talentos. He still announced projects and concessions to private-public partnerships, the principal one among them the Orla de
Guaíba. Meanwhile, he started his administration without a majority in the
Municipal Chamber of Porto Alegre, with his coalition electing just 6 city councilors of the 36 in the assembly. In January 2017, Marchezan Júnior enabled public investment into the Carnaval blocs in the city, as had occurred in previous years. He implemented a series of austerity measures upon taking office, putting forth 10 decrees that would reduce monthly expenses from the city government by way of the suspension of new public competitions and the creation of a committee to evaluate public spending. The year ended with 15 drops in leadership positions in government, including secretaries, secretaries-adjunct, political leadership, and directors of public businesses.
2018 In the first two years of being in government, his administration was criticized for not doing the weeding and mowing of parks and plazas, as well as lowering the number of times that public spaces were cleaned. Marchezan Júnior asserted that it was due to the fiscal state of the municipality. As such, later that year, he announced a delay in the payment of public servants and presented a new career plan that changed worker's salaries, but pulled back from the plan after protests that lasted 40 days. The city government sought to approve financial reforms that would increase levies with the IPTU, but it was rejected in a vote of 25 to 10, being criticized for representing a tax increase on the majority of real estate. In 2018, he began to implement his plans towards public-private partnerships, presentign plans towards lighting, trash collection, and digital clocks in the city. He also sanctioned the General Law of Taxis. Along with this, Marchezan Júnior presented a new project of reforms on the IPTU, initially on an urgent basis, but the process was taken back to expand the discussion period. In December of that year, the
MDB decided to enter the governmental coalition, expanding their coalition from 11 seats to 17 seats.
2019 At the beginning of 2019, the proposed changes towards the IPTU were approved by the Municipal Chamber with a 22–14 vote. Throughout 2019, the relationship between the mayor and the
Progressistas began to deteriorate, culminating in the release of various people linked to the party and subsequently the leaving of people associated with the PP from municipal government.
2020 In 2020, Marchezan Júnior sent in the Budgetary Guidelines Law to the Municipal Chamber with a revenue forecast of R$ 476 million. In August, the Municipal Chamber approved the opening of an impeachment processes against the mayor with a vote of 31 out of the 36 councilors, due to accusations of misuse of R$3.1 million from the Municipal Health Fund towards publicity campaigns.
Collective transportation Carris During his 2016 campaign, Marchezan Júnior denied that he had the intention to privatize
Carris, the public company that runs the city's transport network. However, in June 2017, he affirmed that Carris could be privatized. The following month, he emphasized once again that the business should be privatized or make bids on lines. In June 2018, the municipal government hired a consulting company to analyze Carris and Marchezan Júnior again defended privatization as a possible option for the company. In January 2019, 83 Carris vehicles turned 13 years old and as a result could not be circulated anymore according to municipal laws altered the prior year, which raised the usage lifespan from 10 to 12 years. The business issued a notice for the renovations of the fleet in March, a measure following a decree signed by Marchezan Júnior to increase the lifespan of their use from 12 years to 14 years. Despite promises that the new buses would begin circulating in October, the difficulty in obtaining financing delayed the purchase. In November, the Municipal Chamber authorized the business to license almost R$ 40.1 million real in credit for the purchase of 87 buses. The municipality further promised that the fleet would start operating in February of the following year. However, a new notice was issued in February, at the moment that the city legislation obligated the exchange of 97 buses.
Bus fees Even as he denied on the campaign trail that he would end with the second round of free fares in Porto Alegre, The following month, city councillors from the
PDT,
PSOL and
PT went to the courts to request an annulment of the decree, which occurred in a limited manner, under the justification that the charges produced irreparable harm to the population. The municipality increased resources in September without success. In March 2018, Marchezan Júnior extinguished the exemptions to the bus fares, again through decree . In June 2019, the Tribunal suspended the decree. However, it was later adjudicated on appeal and the fees began to be charged again. Three months after assuming the mandate, the mayor increased, by decree, the bus fares from R$3.75 to R$4.05, which motivated a series of protests between February and March. The following year, the municipality increased the bus fare even further to R$4.30 and ended the exemptions on fares. In February 2019, his administration raised the fares against from R$4.30 to R$4.70. In a publication to social media, Marchezan Júnior claimed that there had been a reduction in fares by R$0.45, when in fact there was an increase of 40 cents. The post was made private after much criticism by the population. There were protests against the increase. At the beginning of 2020, the municipality began discussions about yet another increase in bus fares, that would increase fares to R$5.05. However, due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, which decreased bus ridership drastically, and as a result, the increase was postponed. In December 2019, the Municipal Chamber approved a proposal sent by the executive to end exemptions on bus fares on people aged 60 to 64, maintaining it only for those who had bought tickets who are below the threshold of three regional minimum wages.
Proposals to lower bus fares During Marchezan Júnior's mandate, the municipality implemented 17 kilometers of lanes exclusively for buses and taxis until May 2020. In January 2020, the mayoralty sent a group of proposed laws to the Municipal Chambers to lower the bus fares, nicknaming the effort Projeto Transporte Cidadão. The propsoal prevents the charge of R$.28 per kilometer driven by ridesharing companies, exemptions for specific rates, and would have also implemented congestion pricing to pay for cars that would drive through Porto Alegre. It also included the charging of a mobility rate from businesses, instead of the payment of the individual "vale-transporte"; and the end of management rates for the Fare Compensation Chamber. In February 2020, the Municipal Chamebr rejected a proposal to eliminate bus fare collectors on buses. In August 2020, the municipality revised the congestion pricing proposal, proposing instead to implement it only in the
Centro Histórico neighborhood, with automatic tolling through cameras.
Impeachment proceedings On 5 August 2020, impeachment proceedings were opened against Marchezan Júnior, beginning with a protocoled request made by, among others, a provisional city councilor candidate for the
PRTB. That night, the mayor protested by way of social media, claiming that the usage of healthcare money from their funds for publicity campaigns in the same area is permitted by the
Brazilian Constitution. The Municipal Chamber accepted the petition and started the process, unlike the 5 requests for detterence made prior, with the vote of 31 out of 36 councilors, under the justification of misused funds from the health fund. Marchezan Júnior pointed to 29 people as witnesses during the impeachment process, including political adversaries, many of whom said they did not know why they were made to be involved in the process. The investigative committee, in turn, determined that only 10 of the testimonies could be used. The mayor's defense also asked that the copy of the process of the former vice-mayor, Eliseu Santos, who was assassinated in 2010, would be joined with the deterrence process. In response, the president of the City Council, Reginaldo Pujol of the Democrats, affirmed that they would not vote in the mayor's favor since "he keeps saying that he will corner everyone".
CPI of the Marchezan administration A
parliamentary inquiry committee (CPI) was created by the municipal chamber to investigate possible irregularities in the Marchezan Júnior administration, starting on 3 October 2019. In August 2020, the report further corroborated the previous commission's findings and recommended an indictment against him for leveraging influence on the bureaucracy,
influence peddling, administrative impropriety, bidding exemptions,
passive corruption, and interest trafficking. To that end, the CPI concluded the work recommending an indictment against Marchezan Júnior, as well as his municipal secretary of Institutional Relations, Christian Lemos, for false testimonies, and businessman and former director of Procempa Michel Costa for influence peddling. According to the report, the Banco de Talentos, a program that sought to have professionals submit resumes for them to run for vacancies in public service positions, and thus eliminating political favoritism, caused waste in public administrative spending and was used to camouflage political hirings, classifying it as fraudulent for giving a "cloak of technicality for mere political hirings". Along with this, the CPI identified passive corruption when Marchezan Júnior travelled to
Paris in July 2017, with travel expenses paid by Capester, a company in which Costa was a part of. The report also identified collusion between Marchezan Júnior and Costa for favoritism of private interests from Safeconecta in the installation of testing equipment for GPS monitoring in the Carris bus fleet, which was characterized as leveraging the administration's influence in the bureaucracy. The report was forwarded to the Public Prosecutor's office and the Courts of Account of the state. ==References==