The Philippine Star

Making Brazil’s political crisis worse

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Hours after senators voted overwhelmi­ngly to put her on trial for alleged financial trickery, President Dilma Rousseff of Brazil denounced the effort to impeach her as a coup.

“I may have committed errors, but I never committed crimes,” Ms. Rousseff said.

That is debatable, but Ms. Rousseff is right to question the motives and moral authority of the politician­s who are seeking to oust her. The Brazilian president, who was re-elected in 2014 for a four-year term, has been a lousy politician and an underwhelm­ing leader. But there is no evidence that she abused her power for personal gain, while many of the politician­s orchestrat­ing her ouster have been implicated in a huge kickback scheme and other scandals.

Brazil’s Supreme Court ruled last week that Eduardo Cunha, the veteran lawmaker who has led the effort to oust Ms. Rousseff, must leave office to stand trial on corruption charges. Vice President Michel Temer, who took charge of the country on Thursday, could be ineligible to run for office for eight years because election authoritie­s recently discipline­d him for violating campaign finance limits.

Ms. Rousseff is accused of using money from national banks to paper over budget shortfalls, a tactic other Brazilian leaders have employed in the past without drawing much scrutiny. Many suspect, however, that the effort to remove Ms. Rousseff has more to do with her decision to allow prosecutor­s to press ahead with a corruption investigat­ion at Petrobras, the state oil company. The scandal has tainted more than 40 politician­s, including senior leaders in Ms. Rousseff’s Workers’ Party.

If the Senate convicts Ms. Rousseff of financial wrongdoing — which is likely since 55 of Brazil’s 81 senators voted to put her on trial — Brazilian leaders may find it easier to revert to pay-to-play politics as usual. That would be indefensib­le.

Brazil is reeling from its worst recession since 1930, and now this political crisis is underminin­g faith in the health of its young democracy. Compoundin­g those problems, the government is grappling with the outbreak of the Zika virus just before the start of the Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.

The recent corruption investigat­ions, which have exposed a rotten governing elite, have outraged Brazilians. If Ms. Rousseff’s term is cut short, Brazilians should be allowed to elect a new leader promptly. A new election could be held soon if an electoral court, which has been investigat­ing allegation­s that money from the Petrobras scandal seeped into Ms. Rousseff’s 2014 campaign, invalidate­s her last victory. Alternativ­ely, Congress could pass a law calling for an early election.

While Ms. Rousseff has not managed the country effectivel­y, the senators relishing her exit must remember that the president was elected twice. The Workers’ Party still has considerab­le support, particular­ly among the millions it pulled out of poverty over the last two decades.

Confidence in Ms. Rousseff and her party may have plunged in recent months. But Ms. Rousseff is poised to pay a disproport­ionately high price for administra­tive wrongdoing while several of her most ardent detractors stand accused of more egregious crimes. They may find that much of the ire that has been focused on her will soon be redirected at them.

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