Los Angeles Times

Brazil’s crisis could lead to new elections

Vice president, who would take over if Rousseff is ousted, also faces impeachmen­t.

- By Vincent Bevins Bevins is a special correspond­ent.

SAO PAULO, Brazil — Not only is Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff facing the prospect of impeachmen­t, but now her vice president, who would take over if she were deposed, is also the subject of impeachmen­t proceeding­s.

Though it’s considered unlikely that Brazil’s Congress will recommend Vice President Michel Temer be impeached — he is considered to have more allies in the legislatur­e than Rousseff — the Supreme Court’s order to start the proceeding­s adds a new twist to the nation’s deepening political crisis.

New allegation­s also came to light Thursday that make things look worse for Rousseff and Temer. Constructi­on company Andrade Gutierrez donated money to Rousseff’s campaigns that may have come from bribes obtained in the kickback scheme at the state-owned Petrobras oil company, an imprisoned former executive at the constructi­on firm alleged in a plea-bargain confession.

If these accusation­s are proved accurate this year, or if both Temer and Rousseff are removed from office, new presidenti­al elections would be held.

“New elections remain a real alternativ­e, particular­ly in a context when the crisis continues to deepen,” said Christophe­r Garman, head of country analysis at the Eurasia Group. The Andrade Gutierrez revelation is more relevant than the second impeachmen­t request, he added. “The way the impeachmen­t battle has unfolded makes the constructi­on of a stable equilibriu­m a bit more difficult.”

It appeared over the last few weeks that Brazilian elites were uniting around a specific solution to the crisis: Rousseff would be impeached and Temer, of the centrist PMDB party, would take over. The impeachmen­t commission — more than half of whose members face accusation­s of corruption or serious crimes — recently recommende­d that the rest of Congress vote to move the motion forward.

But this week, a Supreme Court justice ordered PMDB member and lower house speaker Eduardo Cunha, a defendant in a corruption and money laundering case, to allow an impeachmen­t request against Temer to proceed.

The request is based on allegation­s that Temer broke the same fiscal rules as Rousseff, but his case would be considered separately from hers.

Rousseff has not been charged with any corruption or directly linked to the Petrobras scandal uncovered by the sprawling Lava Jato, or Car Wash, investigat­ion. Her government Thursday vehemently rejected accusation­s made by the Andrade Gutierrez executive.

Further complicati­ng a swift transition to power for Temer and his party, a number of other proposals have been put forward, including a full election that would replace all of Congress as well as Rousseff and Temer. This would require a constituti­onal amendment.

It has also become clear that Rousseff may be able to assemble the votes needed in the lower house to beat the impeachmen­t case against her.

She needs to rally onethird of votes in the lower house to kill the impeachmen­t bid.

Rousseff said this week that she would consider stepping down if all of Congress stepped down too. Garman’s organizati­on, Eurasia, believes there’s only a 25% chance she will finish her full term, which ends in 2018.

The government maintains that the impeachmen­t effort is illegal and could amount to a political coup because the elected Rousseff has not been convicted of any serious crime, as is required by the constituti­on.

On Thursday, Atty Gen. Jose Eduardo Cardozo told foreign journalist­s that Cunha initiated impeachmen­t only in an “act of political vengeance,” as the house speaker himself was being investigat­ed.

“That is an original sin from which [this impeachmen­t process] can never be freed,” Cardozo said.

 ?? Evaristo Sa
AFP/Getty Images ?? MICHEL TEMER, the vice president, is accused of breaking fiscal rules.
Evaristo Sa AFP/Getty Images MICHEL TEMER, the vice president, is accused of breaking fiscal rules.

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