Silvio Betanjour
Silvio Jacques Betanjour de Hujino, also known by the moniker "Silvio B" was a businessman, rancher and the former Président of Grande Inyursta, serving four-and-a-half consecutive terms from 1896 through 1916. Betanjour remains a controversial figure, known for scandals, suppression of political enemies and an overall "gangster-style" term as presidente; though still lauded and seen as a folk-hero-turned-leader by many.
Early Life
As Subpresidente
As Presidente
Following the assassination of Presidente Gerais, Betanjour wasted no time in pointing the finger at the Valenjia clan. He made no major changes to Gerais's cabinet, with the exception of firing his Secrètaire de Defençéa and replacing him with Benoit le Busche, his own private security manager.
Feud with the Valenjias
Despite it being a somewhat well-known likelihood that the Valenjias had Presidente Gerais killed on their orders, no local or provincial police would investigate the matter. Using his connections, Betanjour assembled a team of "loyal" and high-performing law enforcement officers along with his own private allies to pursue legal action against the Valenjias. To bolster their ranks, a number of special internal security forces from the army were enlisted into the service. This is considered to be the forefather of what would become the Policea National D'Inyursta (PNI).
As Betanjour's personal police force went about their "investigation", the Valenjia's were pushing legal action of their own. Firstly, Ernesto D'Enclaude, their chief family attorney, went about in the wake of the federal police forces and collected evidence of violated rights, unlawful search-and-entries, cruel interrogation tactics, bribes etc. Then, the Valenjia's offered a large sum to anyone from Silvo Betanjour's past or private life to come forward. Lastly, family patriarch Montie Mano Valenjia, approached former presidential runner-up Jean-Pierre Dezonado about the possibility of running again.
Granjèchampé
Betanjour is known for codifying Granjèchampé, an already de-facto state of affairs, into legal precedent when he mobilized and deployed the regular army to enforce rent contracts. In addition to physical force-of-arms, Betanjour's admin also micromanaged affairs and specifically appointed judges who would enforce rent contracts. Despite this being an obvious move to hurt the Valenjias and their allies, who had been using peasant land for mass crop agriculture, but providing a myriad of delayed payments, legal excuses, intentionally poor communications, etc.; it was extremely popular among the rural poor of Inyursta. Furthermore, the move had the effect - likely intended - of causing many peasant landowners to then see contracted rental usage of their land as a "get rich quick" scheme, and began inflating rent prices on the wealthy crop agricultural barons who had been using their land for mere pennies per acre a year.
While the rich agricultural baron families would later find ways of reducing or otherwise mitigating the codified reforms under Betanjour, the legal nature of Granjechampe stuck until Carmòn Solévereu's reign, and was immediately re-implemented following the Inyurstan Civil War.