Itamar Franco (born June 28, 1930, at sea—died July 2, 2011, São Paulo, Brazil) was a Brazilian politician who served as president of Brazil (1992–95).
Franco was born on a ship off the eastern coast of Brazil, sailing from Rio de Janeiro to Salvador. His father died shortly after his birth, and his mother worked as a seamstress. He grew up in the city of Juiz de Fora, in southeastern Minas Gerais state. After attending the School of Engineering of the Federal University of Juiz de Fora, he served as mayor of the city (1966–74).
In the mid-1960s Franco was a founding member of the Brazilian Democratic Movement (now the Party of the Brazilian Democratic Movement [Partido do Movimento Democrático Brasiliero; PMDB]), which was the only opposition party permitted under military rule. In 1974 Franco was elected to the Federal Senate as a representative of the PMDB. He was a senator for 16 years, leading committees on economy and finance (1983–84) and investigating corruption (in the late 1980s). He lost a bid to be governor of Minas Gerais state in 1986.
Franco was picked by Fernando Collor de Mello to be his vice presidential running mate in the 1990 presidential election. Representing the newly organized centrist National Reconstruction Party (Partido da Reconstrução Nacional [PRN]; later renamed the Christian Labour Party [Partido Trabalhista Cristão; PTC]), Collor and Franco won the election. Amid charges of corruption and unable to move reforms through the legislature, Collor resigned in September 1992. Vice President Franco thus became acting president on October 2. The National Congress voted for Collor’s impeachment in December, and Franco was sworn in as president on December 29.
Franco’s image as a quiet, down-to-earth, honest man familiar with the workings of Brazilian politics contrasted sharply with that of his flashier predecessor. Franco was considered an unusual president. He was a private man who disliked public attention and criticism. In his first year in office he held only one scheduled news conference, and cabinet meetings occurred about once every three months. He did not attend official dinners of Latin American heads of state. When a Rio newspaper proclaimed him “a president with a vice president’s agenda,” he stopped making his schedules public. He spoke only Portuguese and was an economic nationalist opposed to neoliberal market reforms. This put him at odds with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), among other agencies, and it was six months before he received the U.S. ambassador, though the United States was Brazil’s leading foreign investor and trading partner at the time. Brazil’s most widely read columnist summed up, “Itamar Franco would be a good city councilman in Juiz de Fora with his office in the corner barbershop.”
Meanwhile, Franco’s administration was confronted with serious problems: inflation soared to 6,000 percent, and the corruption scandal that had plagued Collor spread to the legislative branch. Franco, who appeared temperamental and indecisive, proved unable to find solutions. His 14.5 percent approval rating was one of the worst recorded for a Brazilian president. On October 18, 1993, Franco offered to resign if the National Congress would schedule early elections (set for November 1994), but his offer was declined. The right feared that early elections would mean victory for the popular Workers’ Party (Partido dos Trabalhadores; PT), while the left wanted to milk the ongoing corruption scandal. Business interests sought to avoid postponement of a debate concerning reform of the 1988 constitution. Franco thus remained in office through the 1994 presidential election, which was won by Fernando Henrique Cardoso, who had been Franco’s finance minister from May 1993. Franco stepped down at the end of his term, on January 1, 1995.
Franco was named ambassador to Portugal (1995–96) and then served in Washington, D.C., as a Brazilian representative in the Organization of American States (1996–98). In 1998 he was elected to a four-year term as governor of Minas Gerais state on the PMDB’s ticket. As governor, Franco did not cooperate with Cardoso’s plans for nationwide economic growth; he declared a moratorium on state debt payments and opposed privatization in his state. Franco left the PMDB in December 1999 when he could not get enough backing to split from Cardoso’s alliance. From 2004 to 2005 Franco served as the ambassador of Brazil in Italy. Later he was chairman of the board of the Development Bank of Minas Gerais state.