Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/portugal

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Vasco Cordeiro

Portuguese politician


Summary

Portuguese politician

FieldValue
nameVasco Cordeiro
imageVasco Cordeiro.jpg
captionCordeiro in 2016
orderPresident of the Regional Government of the Azores
term_start6 November 2012
term_end24 November 2020
vicepresidentSérgio Ávila
1blanknameRepresentative
1namedataPedro Catarino
predecessorCarlos César
successorJosé Manuel Bolieiro
office2Regional Secretary of Economics
term_start218 November 2008
term_end2April 2012
president2Carlos César
predecessor2Duarte da Ponte
successor2Luísa Schanderl
office3Regional Secretary of the Presidency
term_start316 November 2004
term_end318 November 2008
president3Carlos César
predecessor3Roberto Amaral
successor3André Bradford
office4Regional Secretary of Agriculture and Fisheries
term_start48 December 2003
term_end416 November 2004
president4Carlos César
predecessor4Ricardo Rodrigues
successor4Noé Rodrigues
birth_nameVasco Ilídio Alves Cordeiro
birth_date
birth_placeCovoada, São Miguel Island (Azores), Portugal
partySocialist Party
spousePaula Cristina Cordeiro
children2
alma_materUniversity of Coimbra
office5Member of the Legislative Assembly of the Azores
term_start513 October 1996
constituency5São Miguel Island

Vasco Ilídio Alves Cordeiro (born 28 March 1973) is a Portuguese Socialist Party politician, who served as President of the Regional Government of the Azores from 2012, following his party's victory in the 2012 Azores regional election, until 2020. From 2022 to 2025 he has been the President of the European Committee of the Regions.

Early life

Vasco Cordeiro was born in the civil parish of Covoada, deannexed from the neighboring parish of Relva, in the flanks of the Serra Devassa, 6 km northwest of Ponta Delgada. He was born to a middle-class farming family, the youngest of three sons of Luís and Lourdes Cordeiro.

He was in the Associação de Escoteiros de Portugal (Scouting Association of Portugal) and the local choir, who sang throughout the island. In addition to music, after school Cordeiro was active in theatre and literature: his mother was an author of dramas and comedies, and he and his friends would represent these roles throughout the island, such as Tradição and Sogra.

He continued his interest in music, even as he studied law in the Faculty of Law, at the University of Coimbra, where he became part of the Grupo de Fados de Coimbra Alta Medina (Alta Medina Fado Group of Coimbra). He interpreted the Balada da Despedida during the annual Queima das Fitas (1990–1995).

Career

He returned to the Azores in 1995, and began to practice law, while at the same time beginning his role in the Juventude Socialista (Socialist Youth). He campaigned door-to-door in 1996, where he quickly built an empathy with the people.

With a post-graduate degree in Regional Law (achieved through a partnership between the University of the Azores and the Faculty of Law, at the University of Lisbon), Cordeiro served as legal counsel for the Associação de Jovens Agricultores Micaelenses (São Miguel Association of Agricultural Youth) between 1998 and 2001. He completed a dissertation on the A Dissolução dos Órgãos de Governo Próprio das Regiões Autónomas (The Dissolution of Government Bodies in the Autonomous Regions) (1998), before beginning an internship with the Portuguese Order of Lawyers, producing a dissertation on Breves Notas sobre a Deontologia Profissional do Advogado (Brief Notes on the Profession Ethics of Lawyers). He continued his legal practice between 1995 and 2003, supplementing it with teaching 11th Grade Philosophy at the Escola Secundária Antero de Quental (Antero de Quental Secondary School), in Ponta Delgada.

Meanwhile, he became the president of the JS-A (Juventude Socialista Açoriana) between 1997 and 1999, assuming in 1996 a place in the Regional Legislature of the Azores. He led the PS in the assembly from November 2000 until December 2003. At this date he abandoned his work as legal counsel and substituted Ricardo Rodrigues, who resigned following the Farfalha scandal, in the Secretary of Agriculture and Fishing. The following year, he exercised the functions of Regional Secretary for the Presidency, during the 9th Regional Government of the Azores, and was responsible for the Economy portfolio during the fourth government of Carlos César.

In the 2012 regional election, he was elected with more votes and deputies than his predecessor in 1996, when the PS defeated the 20-year Social Democratic government of Mota Amaral.

Personal life

It was during his inter-island campaigning that he met Paula Cristina, a senior member of the cabin crew of SATA Air Açores, whom he later married in 2008.

References

References

  1. "Vasco Alves Cordeiro, PS Azores official site".
  2. Luciano Alvarez. (2012-10-14). "Eleições regionais nos Açores: vencedores e vencidos". [[Sonae.com]].
  3. Lusa/SOL. (2012-10-14). "PERFIL: Vasco Cordeiro garante novo ciclo socialista". sol.sapo.pt.
  4. (2024-11-25). "President {{!}} European Committee of the Regions".
  5. Nóbrega, Tolentino. (1 November 2011). "Sucessor de Carlos César "vai ter prova dura no imediato, mas o futuro chega assim"". Público.
  6. (2012). "Vasco Alves Cordeiro". Governo Regional dos Açores.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Vasco Cordeiro — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report