Pages

Thursday, April 21, 2016

Brasil's Temer Denies Coup Conspiracy Against Rousseff

Brazil’s Temer denies coup conspiracy against Rousseff

Vice-president denies allegations from the president amid her impeachment process
Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff (R) and her Vice President Michel Temer during the presentation ceremony of the new army generals at the Army Club in Brasilia, on December 16, 2015. Rousseff is fighting for her political life as she stands accused of illegal budgeting manoeuvres that she says were long-accepted practices by previous governments. AFP PHOTO/EVARISTO SA / AFP / EVARISTO SA (Photo credit should read EVARISTO SA/AFP/Getty Images)
Michel Temer and Dilma Rousseff in Brasília in December © AFP
Brazil’s vice-president Michel Temer has rejected allegations from President Dilma Rousseff that he is conspiring to launch a parliamentary coup against her.
After a vote by the house of congress on Sunday night in favour of her impeachment, Ms Rousseff is to fly to New York on Thursday night for a UN meeting on Friday where she is also expected to give media interviews portraying the impeachmentprocess as unconstitutional and a coup.
“There is no coup whatsoever happening here in Brazil,” Mr Temer, who has otherwise largely stayed out of the front lines of the impeachment battle, told the Financial Times in a rare interview. “Various ministers of the Supreme Court have said the possible impeachment of the president of the republic would not represent a coup. It is a constitutional process.”
Rousseff’s impeachment – what’s next?
The comments mark an escalation of the impeachment battle as an increasingly desperate Ms Rousseff seeks international support to avert her possible removal from power as early as next month.
Struggling with a deep economic recession and a sweeping corruption scandal at state-owned oil company Petrobras, Ms Rousseff and her Workers’ party, the PT, are facing the potential end of 13 years in power.
If the senate agrees to accept the impeachment process, under which Ms Rousseff is accused of manipulating the national accounts, she will be suspended and Mr Temer, as vice-president, will become acting president.
If she is eventually impeached, with a decision from the senate expected by the opposition as early as June, Mr Temer would take office until the next elections in 2018.
The impeachment process follows a civil war in the ruling coalition that has pitched Ms Rousseff and the PT against their former main coalition partner, the PMDB. The party is headed by Mr Temer but early this month he temporarily stepped down to avoid the appearance of involvement in the process.
A 75-year-old constitutional lawyer and veteran politician, Mr Temer said he had stayed quiet during the battle. But he said he was making an exception this time to speak to the international media in protest against Ms Rousseff’s expected comments during her forthcoming visit to New York.
Ms Rousseff, during a press conference in Brasília earlier this week, described Mr Temer as a “conspirator” against her government.
Mr Temer said the proof that there was no coup was that Brazil would be operating normally while Ms Rousseff is in New York.
He would assume the acting presidency while she was away, as is normal under the law. When she returns on Saturday, she would resume the presidency.
“So then, what kind of coup is this?” Mr Temer said.
He said political and popular support for impeachment was also overwhelming, with 367 members of the 513-seat lower house of congress voting for the motion, well over the two-thirds, or 342 votes, required for it to pass, and polls showing 60 to 70 per cent of Brazilians were in favour of Ms Rousseff’s constitutional removal.
“Therefore, I ask, when she accuses me of being a conspirator or a coup-monger — do I really have the capacity to influence 367 deputies [congressmen] and 70 per cent of the Brazilian population? It’s entirely without foundation this claim.”
He said Ms Rousseff should defend herself in the senate instead of creating problems for Brazil by making false declarations outside the country.
“What she should do in my view is defend herself in the senate … with solid arguments so that the senate does not judge and impeach her.”
He rejected Ms Rousseff’s arguments that the impeachment, while it conformed with the constitution in terms of procedure, was unconstitutional in terms of its content.
She has argued the charges of manipulating the budget did not constitute an impeachable offence, giving the process no legal base and therefore making it a coup.
But Mr Temer said impeachment was a political trial, not a legal one. The manipulation of the budget broke the law and under the constitution if such an offence was committed by the president he or she would be subject to a process of “political accountability”.
He said he was not participating in the process. He had, over the past year, instead argued for a process of national unity “to lift the country out of the crisis”.
“I’m not doing any work, any action, but I am aggrieved by her words,” he said.
Mr Temer also attacked what he said was “a proposal from her and those near her” that if she falls from power, the PT and its allies would fill the streets with protesters and create chaos in the country.

No comments:

Post a Comment