Brazilian Woman's Party
Political party in Brazil / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Brazilian Woman's Party[11][12] (Portuguese: Partido da Mulher Brasileira, PMB) is a right-wing political party in Brazil which uses the number 35.[13] Known for its non-feminist and anti-abortion stance, the party is not represented in the National Congress.[14]
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Brazilian Woman's Party Partido da Mulher Brasileira | |
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Abbreviation | PMB |
President | Suêd Haidar Nogueira |
Founded | 2008[1] |
Registered | 29 September 2015; 8 years ago (2015-09-29)[2] |
Membership (2023) | 47,838[3] |
Ideology | |
Political position | Right-wing |
Colors | Dark blue |
Party number | 35 |
Legislative Assemblies[7] | 3 / 1,024 |
Mayors[8] | 1 / 5,568 |
Municipal Chambers[9][10] | 48 / 58,208 |
Website | |
pmb | |
The PMB was founded in 2015 by Sued Haidar, who doubled as the president of the party's National Committee.[15] At its peak, the party was the tenth largest in Congress,[16] represented by 21 federal deputies in the Chamber of Deputies,[15] only two of which were women,[16] and one representative in the Federal Senate, Senator Hélio José.[16] All later switched to other parties. In 2017, the party was condemned by the Superior Electoral Court of Minas Gerais for not having the minimum quota of women candidates.[17] Most of the deputies have since left the party, and José switched his party affiliation to the Brazilian Democratic Movement Party in March 2016.[18]
In January 2017, the PMB had 38,438 members.[19] As of July 2018, this number has grown to 42,619.[19]
On 2021, the party attempted to change its name to "Brasil 35", a modification made to attract the Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro after he left his original Social Liberal Party and failed to create his own Alliance for Brazil,[20][21] and mark the transition of the party to conservatism.[22] However, in April 2022, the Superior Electoral Court refused the name change, on the basis that "the change of the party's name to “Brasil”, [...] would have intense potential to generate confusion or mislead the electorate."[23]