São Bento Palace, seat of the Corporative Chamber, and now of the Assembly of the Republic of Portugal.

The Corporative Chamber (Portuguese: Câmara Corporativa) was one of the two parliamentary chambers established under the Portuguese Constitution of 1933, the other being the National Assembly. Unlike the directly elected National Assembly, it had a purely consultative, rather than legislative role.

The creation of the Corporative Chamber was part of corporatist philosophy advocated by Salazar and adopted by the Estado Novo. Its function was to represent the various economic, cultural, social, and other corporations.

The Corporative Chamber met in the former Senate chamber of the São Bento Palace. It was composed of members elected by the various types of Portuguese corporations, including:

  • Provinces and Municipalities;
  • Universities and Schools;
  • Trade Unions;
  • Economic Organizations and Employers;
  • Social Welfare Organizations.

Presidents

The presidents of the Corporative Chamber were the following from 1935 to 1974:[1]

Term No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term of office Political party
Took office Left office Time in office
I 1 Eduardo Augusto Marques
(1867–1944)
10 January 193510 June 19449 years, 152 daysNational Union
II
III
2 Domingos Fezas Vital
(1888–1953)
25 November 194425 November 19462 years, 0 daysNational Union
IV
3 José Gabriel Pinto Coelho
(1886–1978)
25 November 194625 November 19493 years, 0 daysNational Union
V 4 Marcelo Caetano
(1906–1980)
25 November 19498 July 19555 years, 225 daysNational Union
VI
5 João Pinto da Costa Leite
(1905–1975)
28 November 195528 November 19572 years, 0 daysNational Union
VII 6 Luís Supico Pinto
(1909–1990)
28 November 195716 November 197315 years, 353 daysNational Union
(renamed People's National Action in 1970)
VIII
IX
X
XI 7 Mário Júlio de Almeida Costa
(born 1927)
16 November 197325 April 1974160 daysPeople's National Action

See also

References and footnotes

  1. "Estado Novo - Presidentes da Assembleia Nacional e da Câmara Corporativa" (PDF). Assembleia da República. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 April 2018. Retrieved 28 April 2018. Alt URL
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