Brazil faced noisy protests and rowdy debates in the Brazilian Congress yesterday as this year’s Olympic host country headed for a vote on whether to drive Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff from office.
Today’s vote could topple the 68-year-old leftist leader, in a political crisis threatening to destabilize Latin America’s biggest economy as it struggles through a recession.
Rousseff’s supporters and opponents planned rival rallies over the weekend as lawmakers debate a motion to send her to an impeachment trial in the Brazilian Senate.
Photo: AP
The president’s supporters have been gathering for days in a stadium in the capital, Brasilia, where she was expected to visit them yesterday.
Police tightly guarded the area around Congress, which was surrounded with metal barriers.
Pro and anti-Rousseff rallies are also planned in other cities for today, including the economic capital Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, where the Summer Olympics will be held in August.
Lower house lawmakers were due to make further speeches yesterday and today before voting late today on whether to call for an impeachment trial.
Rousseff is accused of illegally manipulating government accounts.
In a rowdy opening session on Friday, the government’s top lawyer, Jose Eduardo Cardozo, drew noisy complaints when he repeated Rousseff’s claim that the impeachment drive was a “coup.”
“This is a historic process, there’s no doubt,” said Brazilian House Speaker Eduardo Cunha, one of the leaders of the push to remove Rousseff.
Cunha also faces corruption charges.
Late on Thursday, the Brazilian Supreme Court rejected Rousseff’s last-minute bid to have the impeachment proceedings suspended for alleged irregularities.
The pro-impeachment camp appear to have the two-thirds majority of votes needed to pass the impeachment motion up to the Senate, according to a tally by Brazilian newspapers.
If that happens, Rousseff will be sent to trial in the Senate in a process expected to last months.
Rousseff vowed on Thursday: “The government will fight until the last minute ... to foil this coup attempt.”
She also promised to negotiate with opponents if she is allowed to stay in office.
However, the collapse of her coalition has been relentless, starting with the defection of Brazilian Vice President Michel Temer’s PMDB party.
“We have come to a decisive phase in this process and the best thing for the country is to have a result on Sunday, whatever it might be,” PMDB congressional leader Leonardo Piciani said.
“We have to turn the page and not waste more time in political battles and disputes,” he said.
Temer will become interim president if the trial starts in the Senate, and Rousseff would have to step down for six months during the proceedings.
If the Senate then voted by a two-thirds majority to impeach her, she would be ousted and Temer would remain president for the rest of the current term to 2018.
Opposition lawmaker Paulinho da Forca told reporters Friday she had already been discussing “the future government” with “president” Temer.
Meanwhile, Rousseff’s top ally and predecessor as president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, rallied support for her in a video message.
“We are going to defeat impeachment and end this crisis once and for all,” he said.
Lula faces corruption allegations linked to a graft scandal at state oil company Petrobras.
Cardozo said the government was considering further legal appeals.
Rousseff on Friday received support from the visiting head of the Organization of American States, Luis Almagro.
The OAS “has made a detailed analysis of the impeachment process against Dilma, and has concluded that it does not fit within the rules that govern this process,” Almagro said in a lengthy statement. “There is no criminal accusation against the president; rather she has been accused of the poor administration of public resources in 2014. This is an accusation that is political in character, and that does not merit an impeachment process.”
The Uruguayan diplomat said that there was concern over the fate of the most populous democracy in Latin America.
“Brazil has always been an example of democracy in the Hemisphere, and we all need for it to continue to be so,” he said told reporters after meeting with Rousseff.
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