Pedro Paulo

Pedro Paulo

politician Brazil

Pedro Paulo is a Brazilian politician and member of the PSD party, who has served as a federal deputy. He has been involved in various governmental roles and discussions, particularly in relation to the Ministry of Tourism, where his appointment was controversially influenced by the first lady, Janja da Silva, due to past allegations of domestic violence.

Global Media Ratings
Dominance
0.00%
Persistence
0 wks
Reach
578,260
Power
4,117$
Sentiment
5.00
Countries Mentioned
Country Mentions Sentiment Dominance + Persistence x Population = Reach x GDP (millions) = Power
Brazil 3 5.00 0.27% +0% 211,049,527 578,218 $1,500,000 4,110$
Liechtenstein 1 6.00 0.11% +0% 38,137 42 $6,900 8$
Totals 4 211,087,664 578,260 $1,506,900 4,118$
Interactive World Map

Each country's color is based on "Mentions" from the table above.

Recent Mentions

Liechtenstein Liechtenstein: Pedro Paulo is the author of the administrative reform that aims to limit the so-called 'penduricalhos' that inflate public salaries. 6

O Estado de S. Paulo (Estadão): Brasil gasta R$ 20 bi com remunerações acima do teto e lidera ranking de supersalários; veja países

Liechtenstein Liechtenstein: Pedro Paulo is the deputy who presented the administrative reform aimed at combating supersalaries in public service. 8

O Estado de S. Paulo (Estadão): Reforma administrativa combate supersalários, mas precisa de ‘aperto’ para temporários, diz entidade

Liechtenstein Liechtenstein: Pedro Paulo is a deputy who is involved in the proposed administrative reform in Brazil. 7

O Estado de S. Paulo (Estadão): Reforma administrativa: Veja em 14 gráficos como os brasileiros avaliam o serviço público no País

Liechtenstein Liechtenstein: Pedro Paulo is the rapporteur who acknowledged that the reform will not be approved without government support. 5

O Estado de S. Paulo (Estadão): A reforma subiu no telhado

Brazil Brazil: Pedro Paulo is a deputy who proposed the Administrative Reform in the Chamber of Deputies. 7

O Globo: Reforma Administrativa avança na Câmara após resistência de servidores