Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Won’t resign, Brazilian leader says

Temer denies report that he backed paying off ex-lawmaker

- PETER PRENGAMAN AND MAURICIO SAVARESE

RIO DE JANEIRO — Brazilian President Michel Temer on Thursday rejected calls for his resignatio­n, saying he will fight allegation­s that he endorsed the paying of hush money to an ex-lawmaker jailed for corruption.

Temer spoke in a national address after Globo newspaper reported Wednesday night that Temer was recorded saying he supports payments to former Lower House Speaker Eduardo Cunha. The incendiary accusation was the latest developmen­t in a scandal that has had Latin America’s largest nation on edge with its stock market and currency plunging, and rumors circulatin­g that Temer would step down.

“At no time did I authorize the paying of anyone,” Temer said, raising his voice and pounding his index finger against the lectern. “I did not buy anybody’s silence.” “I will not resign,” he said. Protests were planned in several cities and opposition politician­s took to Twitter and news channels to call for Temer to be impeached, saying his government no longer had legitimacy.

“I can’t see how Temer survives this,” said David Fleischer, a political science professor at the University of Brasilia. “There are just too many people against him now.”

The scandal deepened at dawn Thursday as police searched the Rio de Janeiro home and Brasilia office of Sen. Aecio Neves, who nearly won the presidency in 2014

and planned to run again next year until he was suspended from office indefinite­ly by the Supreme Federal Tribunal.

Neves is being investigat­ed in several corruption cases related to an investigat­ion into kickbacks to politician­s. He has denied wrongdoing.

Within 90 minutes of opening, Brazil’s main Ibovespa stock index dropped 10 percent and trading was stopped for 30 minutes. Brazil’s currency, the real, lost 8 percent of its value against the U.S. dollar in the first half of Thursday. Both chambers of Congress canceled sessions and Temer’s office canceled his planned activities.

Late Wednesday, Globo reported that Neves had been recorded asking JBS meatpackin­g company executive Joesley Batista for $700,000 to pay for his defense in the investigat­ion.

Globo also reported that Batista had recorded Temer endorsing a bribe to silence

Cunha. In a statement late Wednesday, the president’s office said Temer “did not participat­e or authorize any attempt to keep Cunha from reaching a plea bargain with Justice [officials].”

If confirmed, the allegation­s could prove devastatin­g for Temer, whose administra­tion has lurched from one crisis to another since he took office just over a year ago.

Cunha led the impeachmen­t fight that removed Dilma Rousseff from the presidency last year and put Temer, then the vice president, into power. Cunha was later was sentenced to 15 years in prison for corruption.

The statement from Temer’s office confirmed that the president did meet with Batista in March. According to the Globo report, Batista secretly recorded the conversati­ons with Temer and Neves and gave them to justice department officials as part of plea bargain negotiatio­ns.

The report said that when Temer was told Cunha was being paid to keep silent, the

president responded: “You have to keep that up, all right?”

Globo did not release the recordings or say how they were obtained.

JBS representa­tives did not respond to emails seeking comment.

Temer and Cunha are members of the same party and were previously allies. However, they appear to have had a falling out during a growing investigat­ion into corruption involving the state oil giant Petrobras. Since beginning three years ago, the investigat­ion into billions of dollars in kickbacks has put several top businessme­n and politician­s in jail.

Many believe that Cunha, who was widely viewed as Brazil’s most powerful politician before being ensnared in several corruption cases, could provide damaging testimony about dozens of others if he reaches a plea bargain with investigat­ors.

Soon after Wednesday’s report, both the Senate and Chamber of Deputies stopped sessions that included work on legislatio­n that Temer’s

administra­tion is pushing in hopes of pulling Latin America’s largest economy out of its worst recession in decades.

“This climate isn’t one in which to work,” Rodrigo Maia, president of the lower chamber, told Globo.

Globo’s reports are the latest in numerous scandals that have plagued Temer, whose approval ratings are hovering around 10 percent. In April, it came to light that eight of his Cabinet ministers were being investigat­ed in cases related to bribery or accepting campaign donations from Brazilian constructo­r Odebrecht, one of the central companies in the kickback scheme at Petrobras.

The Eurasia risk consultanc­y said the new allegation threatens Temer.

If the allegation­s are proved true, “President Temer is unlikely to finish his term,” Eurasia wrote, adding that at the very least the matter will delay major overhauls Temer is proposing. Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Sarah DiLorenzo of The Associated Press.

 ?? AP/ANDRE PENNER ?? A worker monitors screens at a Sao Paulo brokerage as Brazil’s markets and currency reacted Thursday to the latest scandal surroundin­g the country’s president.
AP/ANDRE PENNER A worker monitors screens at a Sao Paulo brokerage as Brazil’s markets and currency reacted Thursday to the latest scandal surroundin­g the country’s president.

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