Texarkana Gazette

President’s trial turns into yelling match

- By Peter Prengaman and Mauricio Savarese

RIO DE JANEIRO—A trial against Brazil’s president turned into a yelling match and was temporaril­y suspended on Friday after the head of Senate declared “stupidity is endless” and sharply criticized a colleague who had questioned the body’s moral authority.

The second day of the trial against President Dilma Rousseff got off to an edgy start when Senate President Renan Calheiros decided to bring up a comment made on Thursday by Sen. Gleisi Hoffmann, a member of Rousseff’s Workers’ Party.

Hoffmann, who like many in the Senate and lower Chamber of Deputies is being investigat­ed for corruption, had declared that “no one here” had the moral standing to judge Rousseff.

“It can’t be that a senator is saying things like this,” said Calheiros, who later added: “I am very sad because this session is, above all, a statement that stupidity is endless.”

In a bizarre and heated exchange with Hoffmann and other senators, Calheiros said he had asked the Supreme Federal Tribunal, the country’s highest court, not to raid Hoffmann’s home, apparently trying to make the point that federal lawmakers should not be persecuted arbitraril­y.

Only the high court can decide to investigat­e, arrest or prosecute federal lawmakers. Police are investigat­ing whether Hoffmann and her husband received kickbacks from state oil company Petrobras in the form of campaign contributi­ons. They deny wrongdoing.

Calheiro’s comments provoked gasps of surprise in the Senate, and are likely to raise questions about his relationsh­ip with justices on the high court, who are supposed to be independen­t.

Soon after the exchange, Calheiros’ office released a statement saying that the petitions to the court were routine in nature and reiterated the immunity of senators.

With several senators shouting at once, Chief Justice Ricardo Lewandowsk­i called for a five minute recess, then changed his mind and said the body would instead return after lunch.

A few hours later, senators returned to the chamber and continued with the proceeding­s in their usual subdued manner.

Rousseff, in the middle of her second term, is accused of breaking fiscal rules in her management of the federal budget. She denies wrongdoing and argues that her enemies are carrying out a “coup d’état.”

Opponents claim that her maneuvers were an attempt to continue high spending and mask deficits, which ultimately exacerbate­d a severe recession in Latin America’s largest economy.

Rousseff and her supporters, however, argue something more nefarious is at play: corrupt lawmakers who want to oust her so they can then water down an investigat­ion into billions of dollars in kickbacks at state oil company Petrobras.

The two-year investigat­ion has led to the jailing of dozens of businessme­n and politician­s, and threatens to bring down many more. Indeed, both Hoffmann and Calheiros, the senators who argued, are being investigat­ed in probes related to Petrobras. And while senators debated on Friday, federal police announced they were recommendi­ng charges against former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Rousseff ’s predecesso­r and mentor.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Lawyer Janaina Paschoal, sitting, talks with senators who support the impeachmen­t of suspended President Dilma Rousseff, during the impeachmen­t trial on Friday in Brasilia, Brazil.
Associated Press Lawyer Janaina Paschoal, sitting, talks with senators who support the impeachmen­t of suspended President Dilma Rousseff, during the impeachmen­t trial on Friday in Brasilia, Brazil.

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