On paper, Brazil's most powerful party is the Brazilian Democratic Movement, which controls 22 of 23 state governorships.
At that point in time the communists were a fraction of the democratic opposition front, the Brazilian Democratic Movement (MDB).
After this, the bulk of the party, including most of the party leaders, joined the Brazilian Democratic Movement, the only opposition party allowed by the regime.
With the introduction of bipartisanship (1965), he joined the Brazilian Democratic Movement, which he would be vice president and then president.
Soon after the AI-5, he became a member of the Brazilian Democratic Movement (MDB).
And at home, through the research group, he found himself an adviser to the main opposition party, the Brazilian Democratic Movement.
In addition, the centrist Brazilian Democratic Movement Party has joined the government in return for an as yet undetermined number of cabinet posts.
The country's majority party, the Brazilian Democratic Movement, has warned that it would not endorse any cutbacks in social spending.
For a while, Mrs. da Silva even sought the protection of the opposition Brazilian Democratic Movement, but became disenchanted.
Brazilian Democratic Movement, a centrist political party in Brazil (1965-1979)