The Korea Times

Brazil leader scraps bid, supports former finance minister

- RIO DE JANEIRO (AP)

— Acknowledg­ing the unlikeliho­od of his re-election, Brazil’s deeply unpopular president on Tuesday said he wasn’t running and endorsed his former finance minister for the top office less than five months before voters in Latin America’s largest nation pick a new leader.

President Michel Temer’s decision to back former Finance Minister Henrique Meirelles came after months of weighing whether to run himself. Temer’s approval rating has consistent­ly been below 10 percent — at one point it reached 3 percent — and mounting corruption allega- tions against him have frequen t ly drowned out his government’s ambitious reform agenda.

“Meirelles is the best of the best,” Temer said, standing next to the former finance minister at an event in Brasilia put on by Meirelles’ Brazilian Democratic Movement party.

In his short speech, broadcast by Globo TV, Temer acknowledg­ed his chances of re-election were slim.

“I am realistic. I know what I did and what I did not do (in office),” he said.

Temer was vice president when he moved into the top office in 2016 after President Dilma Rousseff was impeached and removed from power for illegally managing the federal budget.

While overseeing a handful of reforms, including a rewriting of labor laws, Temer’s government has suffered numerous scandals.

Temer himself has been charged with corruption in two cases by the country’s attorney general. Con- gress’ lower house, the Chamber of Deputies, which must approve any prosecutio­n of a sitting president, voted twice last year to shield Temer from being put on trial. He could still be tried in those cases once he leaves office at the end of this year.

More recently, federal police have been investigat­ing whether Temer used family members, including his young son, to launder illicit money by buying real estate and doing renovation­s.

Temer has strongly denied wrongdoing in the any of the cases, denouncing the probe as “criminal persecutio­n.”

 ??  ?? Henrique Meirelles
Henrique Meirelles

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