Mail & Guardian

Temer’s plans rattle Brazil’s coalition

His tenure is based on taking unpopular decisions and clearing the way for wannabe presidents

- Anthony Boadle

Apledge by Brazil’s new president, Michel Temer, not to run in the 2018 election enticed political rivals to back his coalition but pressure from his party might lead him to break the promise, jeopardisi­ng the support he needs to push through reforms.

Temer needs the backing of a fragile coalition of 21 parties in Congress to pass a raft of legislatio­n aimed at dragging Brazil out of a budgetary crisis and ending its worst recession since the Great Depression.

First and foremost is a constituti­onal cap on spending that Temer aims to push through this year.

The 75-year-old conservati­ve lawyer, who was sworn in last week to finish the term of impeached leftist Dilma Rousseff, is also targeting an overhaul of Brazil’s costly pension system and labour laws to restore economic competitiv­eness.

His government has pledged to present the pension reform Bill this month but, with local elections due in October, members of his Brazilian Democratic Movement Party (PMDB) are seeking to delay it until after the vote.

Temer has said repeatedly he will not be a candidate at the 2018 presidenti­al election, casting himself as a transition­al leader who will restore political and economic stability in a short presidency of just over two years.

But one of his aides told Reuters that a Temer presidenti­al run “has not been ruled out”, especially if the economy recovers.

Lower House speaker Rodrigo Maia, from the allied Democrats Party, said the PMDB would want Temer to run if he is able to push through reforms, restore confidence among investors and deliver on economic growth.

“With those variables in place, Temer would decide the 2018 election, whether he is candidate or picks someone else to run,” Maia said in a recent interview.

But to make progress on reforms, Temer relies on the support of the centrist Brazilian Social Democratic Party (PSDB), which agreed to back him as long as he takes austerity measures to balance Brazil’s books and restore growth.

After narrowly losing the 2014 election to Rousseff, the PSDB’s leader Aecio Neves is eyeing 2018. So are several other senior party figures, including Temer’s foreign minister, José Serra.

There are already signs of friction in the coalition after Temer’s PMDB, which faces a number of corruption investigat­ions, proposed a hefty pay rise for Brazil’s Supreme Court justices.

“The PMDB made it explicit that Temer would not be a candidate when we negotiated support for his government to put the country back on track,” said PSDB Senator Ricardo Ferraço.

“If he becomes a candidate, it will undermine efforts to pass these measures,” Ferraço said in comments delivered through a spokespers­on. He complained Temer was sending mixed signals by allowing pay raises for public sector employees.

Neves bluntly warned Temer last week not to ease up on his government’s belt-tightening promises, saying it could not survive without PSDB support.

“The PSDB’s plan is to have Temer carry out these unpopular reforms that are urgently needed but have a high political cost,” said Welber Barral, a policy consultant for multinatio­nal corporatio­ns in Brazil. “A good part of the PSDB backing for Temer hinges on a guarantee that he will not run.”

On Thursday, another government ally, Senator Ronaldo Caiado of the Democrats party, declared he would vote independen­tly of the Temer coalition in the Senate because of the planned salary increase for Supreme Court justices, which raises the bar for pay in the rest of the judiciary, a bill Rousseff had vetoed.

In another dispute, both Neves and Caiado blasted Temer for not keeping his party in line when a majority of PMDB senators voted to allow Rousseff to retain her political rights after she was removed from office.

The PMDB is Brazil’s largest political party. It has not occupied the presidency since 1990 but has held several government­s together, forgoing fielding a presidenti­al candidate so it could build alliances for gubernator­ial and congressio­nal races.

But it has said it intends to run its own candidate in 2018.

After two failed presidenti­al bids, Serra has yet to throw in the towel and is striving to make his mark in Temer’s government by revamping Brazilian foreign policy with a probusines­s focus.

F i n a n c e Mi n i s t e r H e n r i q u e

 ?? Schincario­l/AFP Photos: Miguel ?? Violent clashes: An image of acting President Michel Temer (top) during a protest by supporters of suspended Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff in Sao Paulo.
Schincario­l/AFP Photos: Miguel Violent clashes: An image of acting President Michel Temer (top) during a protest by supporters of suspended Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff in Sao Paulo.
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