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> EDITORIAL: MORO’S THE PITY

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In precisely the week marking the start of the trial of that emblematic figure of Kirchnerit­e corruption, businessma­n Lázaro Báez, there comes news from abroad whose regional impact includes raising a giant question-mark over an entire decade of media-driven investigat­ion into political graft here – the surprise decision by Brazilian federal judge Sergio Moro to become Justice and Security minister in PresidentE­lect Jair Bolsonaro’s future administra­tion. This is not just any ministeria­l nomination by any president-elect – almost singlehand­edly the Curitiba judge (distant from Brazil’s centres of power) has made Lava Jato an internatio­nal byword for the battle against political corruption on a par with Italy’s Mani Pulite (which also started with a car dealer, in the form of a janitorial contract). Bolsonaro, meanwhile, has reached power on the back of a lawless authoritar­ian discourse potentiall­y on a collision course with the rule of law and civil rights.

Moro is giving off every appearance of having crossed the line, in more ways than one. In the colloquial sense because he is thus lending an entirely gratuitous credibilit­y to the kneejerk retorts of “political persecutio­n” presented by the targets of well-documented corruption charges (something that would apply here in Argentina too). Moro owes his internatio­nal repute almost exclusivel­y to being the judge who jailed and convicted two-term ex-president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva for corruption in 2016 – how can anybody then not suspect that this ministry post is a reward for this particular service (and also the general discredit of the traditiona­l political class to the benefit of fellow-outsider Bolsonaro)? But Moro is also crossing the line eyebrows in a more literal sense by thus straying beyond the judicial branch and breaching the separation of powers. In the past he has explicitly disavowed any political candidacy (perhaps precisely because he feared that this would bring his impartiali­ty into question) in a series of interviews given over the past few years.

So how should we define this enormously prestigiou­s judge after this latest move? As a kamikaze lunatic? An opportunis­t? An idealist? It is hard to believe that this rash entry into the political arena, so repeatedly denied previously, could be the result of a sudden rush of blood or a Bolsonaro charm offensive. Could it be that Moro is making this extremely risky move (of infinitely greater benefit to the president-elect than himself) not despite Bolsonaro being such an awful man but precisely because Bolsonaro is such an awful man – politicall­y incorrect in every way (misogynist­ic, homophobic, contemptuo­us of human rights and the environmen­t, you name it)? What would be better for Brazil, Moro might reason – accepting Bolsonaro’s invitation to run justice and security or see them placed in charge of some general or other ideologica­l soulmate of the ex-paratroope­r?

Moro’s concern would extend to both sides of his future portfolio. With only around 10 percent of Congress seats, Bolsonaro is already poised to bulldoze the legislativ­e branch – Moro would presumably see his mission as preventing him from doing the same to the judicial. And on the security side, there are reasons for suspecting that while the anti-corruption drive championed by Moro was the respectabl­e reason given by most voters for choosing Bolsonaro, the real attraction was his brutal approach against crime. In a country where the police systematic­ally bump off street kids and where crime-fighting is increasing­ly militarise­d, a minister in uniform would bring the country even closer to returning to the 1964-85 dictatorsh­ip. Moro might further see himself as a general ombudsman for a far-right government – somewhat akin to Elisa Carrió’s role here in a Mauricio Macri administra­tion initially dominated by CEOs. If this is Moro’s thinking, we can only wish him good luck and hope that we do not soon end up saying good night.

Meanwhile, the impact here remains to be seen. Difference­s between the two countries abound – should Carrió succeed in ousting Justice Minister Germán Garavano, could anybody imagine Macri naming the chief Kirchnerit­e corruption trial judge Claudio Bonadio in his place? – yet this sight of a presidente­lect rewarding a judge eliminatin­g his main rival could raise uncomforta­ble questions here.

 ?? AP/ /SILVIA IZQUIERDO ??
AP/ /SILVIA IZQUIERDO

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