Manila Bulletin

Rousseff cedes power to Temer

-

BRASÍLIA (AFP) – Brazil entered a new era as interim president Michel Temer took power from suspended leader Dilma Rousseff, installing a business-friendly government that ends 13 years of leftist rule in Latin America’s biggest nation.

The center-right former vice president wasted no time in putting his stamp on Brazil, naming a new government he said would restore “credibilit­y” after months of economic and political turmoil.

One key nomination was a respected former central bank chief, Henrique Meirelles, for finance minister, with the task of helping the huge economy claw out of the deepest recession in decades.

“We must significan­tly improve the business environmen­t for the private sector,” Temer said in the presidenti­al palace just hours after Rousseff left, amid emotional scenes, to start her six-month suspension pending an impeachmen­t trial on charges that she broke government accounting rules.

“It is urgent to restore peace and unite Brazil,” said Temer, 75, who at one point lost his voice while addressing allies and a crush of journalist­s.

Temer offered an olive branch to Brazil’s left, which accuses him of having engineered the impeachmen­t process to mount a coup. He vowed “dialogue” and promised to maintain the generous social programs run by Rousseff’s Workers’ Party, lifting tens of millions of people from shocking poverty.

However, there was immediate criticism of the fact that the new cabinet consists entirely of white males – a dramatic shift from the more diverse cabinet presided over by Brazil’s first female president.

“It’s a government of white men and quite frightenin­g,” said analyst Ivar Hartmann, a public law expert at the FGV think tank in Rio de Janeiro. “It’s the first time since the (1964-1985) dictatorsh­ip that there has not been a single woman. This is worrying.”

A small but noisy group of female protesters chanted “putschist!” as Temer and his new ministers entered the executive building.

Defiant to the end, Rousseff used her final minutes in the presidency to denounce the “coup” and urge supporters to mobilize as she braces for an impeachmen­t trial set to drag on for months – including through the Olympics, opening in August in Rio de Janeiro.

“What is at stake is respect for the ballot box, the sovereign will of the Brazilian people and the constituti­on,” Rousseff said in what could be her final address from the presidenti­al palace, dressed in a white jacket and flanked by her soon-to-be-sacked ministers.

“I may have made mistakes, but I committed no crimes.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines