Waterloo Region Record

Brazilian president fights back

Impeachmen­t hearings to decide her fate this week

- Mauricio Savarese and Peter Prengaman

BRASILIA, BRAZIL — Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff proclaimed her innocence on Monday, branding her vice-president a “usurper” and warning senators that history would judge them harshly if they ousted a democratic­ally-elected leader on false charges.

Rousseff ’s much anticipate­d speech to the lawmakers who will decide this week whether to permanentl­y remove her from office was characteri­zed by the same defiance she has shown throughout an impeachmen­t process that has divided Latin America’s most populous nation.

“I know I will be judged, but my conscience is clear. I did not commit a crime,” Rousseff told the senators who listened intently, in contrast to the chamber’s usual raucousnes­s.

In the middle of her second term, the left-leaning leader has been accused of breaking fiscal rules to hide problems in the federal budget. She has denied any wrongdoing, accusing her opponents of a “coup d’état.”

Rousseff reminded those in attendance that she was re-elected in 2014 by more than 54 million votes, asserting that at every moment since she has followed the constituti­on and sought to do what was best for the country.

Brazil’s first female president, a former guerrilla fighter who was jailed and tortured during the country’s dictatorsh­ip, Rousseff drew a connection between her past and the situation today.

“I can’t help but taste the bitterness of injustice,” she said of the process that will decide not only her fate but the nation’s political future.

In a 30-minute speech, she argued that in early 2015 opposition lawmakers began creating a climate of instabilit­y by refusing to negotiate and throwing what she called “fiscal bombs” in the face of declining revenues.

She said the impeachmen­t process had exacerbate­d the recession in Latin America’s largest economy, placing the blame on the opposition, which argued she has to be removed for the financial climate to improve.

Rousseff blasted interim President Michel Temer as a “usurper.” Her vice-president turned arch-enemy, Temer took over when the Senate voted in May to impeach and suspend Rousseff for up to 180 days while a trial was prepared. He will serve out Rousseff ’s term if she is removed.

Referring to Temer, Rousseff said Brazilians would never have elected a man who named a cabinet of all white men in a country that is more than 50 per cent nonwhite. The cabinet that Temer put in place in May has been roundly criticized for its lack of diversity; three of his ministers were forced to step down a month into office due to corruption allegation­s.

Rousseff asserted she had paid a price for refusing to quash a wide-ranging police investigat­ion into the state oil company Petrobras, saying that corrupt lawmakers had conspired to oust her to derail the investigat­ion into billions in kickbacks at the oil giant.

The investigat­ion has led to the jailing of top businessme­n and politician­s, including in her Workers’ Party. But they have plenty of company: Watchdog groups estimate that 60 per cent of the 594 lawmakers in both chambers are being investigat­ed for wrongdoing, many for corruption related to the Petrobras probe.

Rousseff said it was “an irony of history” that she would be judged for crimes she did not commit, by people who were accused of serious crimes.

“I ask that you be just with an honest president,” she said, her voice cracking with emotion.

After Rousseff ’s speech, senators from both the opposition and her bloc of supporters began cross-examining her, a process expected to go late into Monday, followed by a vote on whether to remove her, expected as early as Tuesday or Wednesday.

One of the sharpest exchanges came with Sen. Aecio Neves, who narrowly lost the presidenti­al election to Rousseff in 2014. He accused her of lying to voters.

To be removed, at least 54 of the 81 senators need to vote in favour. Counts by local media find that 52 senators have said they plan on voting for removal, while 18 are opposed and 11 have not said one way or another. In May, the same body voted 55-21 to impeach and suspend her.

 ?? MARIO TAMA, GETTY IMAGES ?? Suspended President Dilma Rousseff points to an economic chart displaying oil prices while answering a question from a senator on the Senate floor during her impeachmen­t trial on Monday in Brasilia, Brazil.
MARIO TAMA, GETTY IMAGES Suspended President Dilma Rousseff points to an economic chart displaying oil prices while answering a question from a senator on the Senate floor during her impeachmen­t trial on Monday in Brasilia, Brazil.

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