#Temer
has said he is the victim of a
conspiracy and Bolsonaro news (theguardian)
SOURCE/VIDEO LINK: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nEEhjM9DM6I
Accused of corruption, popularity near zero – why is Temer still Brazil's president?
Michel
Temer may escape impeachment, but the ongoing political crisis
undermines democracy and opens the door to authoritarian hardliners
President
Michel Temer attends a celebration of small business at Planalto
Palace in Brasília earlier this month. He faces charges of
corruption, racketeering and obstruction of justice. Photograph:
Evaristo Sa/AFP/Getty Images
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Dom
Phillips in Rio de Janeiro
Tuesday 17
October 2017 20.52 BST First published on Tuesday 17 October
2017 10.00 BST
If Brazil’s
recent decline could be plotted in the falling popularity of its
presidents, Michel
Temer represents the bottom of the curve.
In 2010,
Luiz
Inácio Lula da Silva ended his second term with an 80% approval
rating. In March 2016 – four months before she was impeached –
his protege and successor Dilma
Rousseff’s administration had a 10% rating.
Last month,
the government of Temer, Rousseff’s former vice-president, plunged
to 3% in one poll. Among under 24-year-olds, Temer’s approval hit
zero.
Temer has
been charged with corruption, racketeering
and obstruction of justice. Yet there have been none of the huge,
anti-corruption street protests that helped drive Rousseff’s
impeachment on charges of breaking budget rules.
And unlike
Rousseff, Temer has retained the support of financial markets who
like the austerity measures he has introduced, such as privatising
government services, a 20-year cap on expenditure and a planned
pensions overhaul.
There are
signs of economic recovery. But spending has been so pared to the
bone that some basic functions of the state are now at risk.
Critics say
Temer’s austerity drive hurts the poor more than the rich.
According to a survey by Oxfam Brasil, richer Brazilians pay
proportionally less tax than the poor and middle classes and the
richest 5% earn the same as the rest of the population put together.
Yet the highest rate of income tax is just 27.5% .
Markets
don’t care much about inequality, but the damaging graft
allegations against the president and his allies also threaten to
inflict further damage on the country’s institutions.
Temer seems
likely to survive this latest crisis – he is expected to win a
second vote in the lower house of congress this week on whether to
suspend him for a trial – but trust in Brazil’s political leaders
has been drastically undermined.
That lack
of trust is feeding support for an authoritarian solution to the
crisis – which could have serious consequences in next year’s
presidential elections.
The lower
house of congress first voted not to suspend the president for a
trial after Temer was charged with corruption, shortly after his
government agreed to spend $1.33bn on projects in the states of
lawmakers who were due to vote, according to independent watchdog
Open Accounts.
Many of
those lawmakers are allied with powerful agribusiness and evangelical
Christian lobbies, and face their own graft investigations.
Environmentalists say Temer’s administration is reducing Amazon
protection in return for their support.
“Our
country has been kidnapped by a band of unscrupulous politicians,”
former supreme court justice Joaquim Barbosa said afterwards.
Temer has
since been charged with obstruction of justice; along with six
leading figures from his party, the Brazilian Democratic Movement
Party, or PMDB, he was charged with racketeering.
Janot has
also filed charges against Lula, Rousseff and leading members of
their Workers’ party – former allies of Temer’s PMDB – and
said both parties were part of a criminal organisation that for 15
years had accepted bribes for decisions relating to ports, airports,
droughts, oil rigs, tax breaks and hydroelectric plants in the
Amazon.
Former
prosecutor general Rodrigo Janot – who unveiled the charges against
the three former presidents – said Temer’s party abandoned
Rousseff’s governing coalition because it had failed to stop the
graft investigation, which in turn led to the lower house of congress
approving impeachment proceedings.
“All the
members of his criminal organisation, independent of the nucleus they
belonged to, had a common interest that united them,” Janot wrote.
“The maximum, undue economic advantage for themselves and the
others, independent of whether such business attended the public
interest or not.”
All of the
accused have denied the accusations. Temer has said he is the victim
of a conspiracy.
As supreme
court justice Luís Barroso told foreign journalists recently in Rio,
formidable interests are protecting themselves.
“These
people are powerful, they have allies, partners and accomplices
everywhere, at the highest echelons, in the powers of the Republic,
in the press and where one would least imagine,” he said.
But 78% of
Brazilians support the graft investigation. And their disillusionment
over the way it is playing out at the highest levels opens a
dangerous gap for populists and extremists in next year’s
presidential elections.
Lula
is seeking a return to the presidency in 2018 – and currently
leads polling, but he has been handed nearly a sentence of nearly 10
years in prison for corruption and money laundering, and may well be
ruled ineligible to stand.
Brazil's right on the rise as anger grows over scandal and corruption
Read more
A likely
rightwing candidate is João Doria, the
flamboyant, multimillionaire mayor of São Paulo. Like Donald
Trump, he is a former host of Brazil’s version of the TV show The
Apprentice, only assumed power last January, and has no prior
administrative experience.
Running
second in many polling scenarios is Jair Bolsonaro, a
former army captain whose extreme rightwing, authoritarian
message plays well with those angry over corruption as well as voters
petrified by Brazil’s soaring levels of violent crime.
And he
enjoys the support of a growing number who argue that Brazil’s
armed forces should intervene – as they did in 1964, when they
installed a vicious dictatorship that lasted 21 years – an option
supported by 43% , according to a September online poll.
In
September the high-ranking army general Antonio Mourão spooked many
when he said that in his view if Brazil’s institutions could not
remove those involved in illicit acts from public life, “we will
have to impose this”.
Bolsonaro
defended him. “Democracy isn’t done by buying votes or accepting
corruption for governability,” he tweeted to 602,000 followers.
“Reacting to this is the obligation of any civilian or SOLDIER.”
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==//==
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But 78% of
Brazilians support the graft investigation. And their disillusionment
over the way it is playing out at the highest levels opens a
dangerous gap for populists and extremists in next year’s
presidential elections.
Lula
is seeking a return to the presidency in 2018 – and currently
leads polling, but he has been handed nearly a sentence of nearly 10
years in prison for corruption and money laundering, and may well be
ruled ineligible to stand.
Brazil's right on the rise as anger grows over scandal and corruption
Read more
A likely
rightwing candidate is João Doria, the
flamboyant, multimillionaire mayor of São Paulo. Like Donald
Trump, he is a former host of Brazil’s version of the TV show The
Apprentice, only assumed power last January, and has no prior
administrative experience.
Running
second in many polling scenarios is Jair Bolsonaro, a
former army captain whose extreme rightwing, authoritarian
message plays well with those angry over corruption as well as voters
petrified by Brazil’s soaring levels of violent crime.
And he
enjoys the support of a growing number who argue that Brazil’s
armed forces should intervene – as they did in 1964, when they
installed a vicious dictatorship that lasted 21 years – an option
supported by 43% , according to a September online poll.
In
September the high-ranking army general Antonio Mourão spooked many
when he said that in his view if Brazil’s institutions could not
remove those involved in illicit acts from public life, “we will
have to impose this”.
Bolsonaro
defended him. “Democracy isn’t done by buying votes or accepting
corruption for governability,” he tweeted to 602,000 followers.
“Reacting to this is the obligation of any civilian or SOLDIER.”
Since you’re here …
… we have
a small favour to ask. More people are reading the Guardian than ever
but advertising revenues across the media are falling fast. And
unlike many news organisations, we haven’t put up a paywall – we
want to keep our journalism as open as we can. So you can see why we
need to ask for your help. The Guardian’s independent,
investigative journalism takes a lot of time, money and hard work to
produce. But we do it because we believe our perspective matters –
because it might well be your perspective, too.
I appreciate there not being a paywall: it is more democratic for the media to be available for all and not a commodity to be purchased by a few. I’m happy to make a contribution so others with less means still have access to information. Thomasine F-R.
If everyone
who reads our reporting, who likes it, helps to support it, our
future would be much more secure.
Make
a contribution
Topics
Most popular
related stories
Published: 14 Sep 2017
Published: 3 Aug 2017
Published: 2 Aug 2017
Published: 27 Jun 2017
Brazil
faces fresh turmoil after President Temer charged with corruption
-
Brazilian court dismisses corruption case against President Michel Temer
Published: 10 Jun 2017 -
Brazil president formally accused of conspiracy against corruption inquiry
Published: 19 May 2017 -
Brazil's ex-president Lula decries persecution as he faces corruption charges in court
Published: 11 May 2017 -
Brazil president Michel Temer accused of soliciting millions in illegal donations
Published: 12 Dec 2016Brazil president Michel Temer accused of soliciting millions in illegal donations
most viewed
-
1
-
2
-
3
-
4
-
5
-
6
-
7
-
8
-
9
-
10
-
make a contribution
-
solve
technical issue
©
2017 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies.
All rights reserved.
THE
END
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