Oman Daily Observer

Brazil’s Temer plays for time in illegal campaign funding case

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BRASILIA: President Michel Temer’s government expects a federal judge to recommend his removal for illegal campaign funding but believes it can stall a final decision by Brazil’s top electoral court until after he leaves office next year, aides said.

If Temer can delay the process it could allow him to press ahead with fiscal reforms and austerity policies that have lifted Brazil’s currency and stocks and raised chances the country will emerge from a deep recession in 2017.

The case before the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE) alleges that proceeds from corruption and political kickbacks were used to fund Temer’s 2014 election campaign when he was the vice-presidenti­al running mate to Dilma Rousseff, who was impeached last year for manipulati­ng budget accounts.

Damaging new evidence was given on Wednesday by the jailed former CEO of Brazil’s largest engineerin­g firm, Marcelo Odebrecht, who confirmed that his company made illegal donations to the campaign to the federal judge handling the case.

Judge Herman Benjamin is now expected to recommend in coming weeks the ticket be annulled, presidenti­al aides said.

If the decision were confirmed by the electoral court, Temer would be removed and a successor picked by Congress to lead Brazil to elections at the end of next year.

But Temer is playing for time, counting on a possible appeals process stretching on past the next general election scheduled for October 2018, in which he has said he will not stand, a presidenti­al aide said on Thursday.

“There is an ample gamut of appeal options. The president thinks this will drag out into 2019,” the aide said.

Legal experts said the court is a conservati­ve panel unlikely to oust a president but that could change if Brazil’s worst ever recession drags on and a widening bribery scandal paralyses Temer’s government.

Brazil’s establishm­ent is bracing for the publicatio­n of explosive plea bargain statements by 77 Odebrecht employees expected to list dozens of politician­s who took kickbacks from a company at the centre of bribery investigat­ions in a dozen Latin American countries.

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