The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Impeachmen­t vote begins in Brazil amid pushing, yelling

- By Jenny Barchfield

BRASILIA, BRAZIL — Impeachmen­t proceeding­s against President Dilma Rousseff went to a decisive vote Sunday with pro- and anti-government legislator­s shouting and shoving inside Congress while thousands of Brazilians for and against the embattled leader rallied outside.

Eduardo Cunha, the lower house speaker leading the drive to oust Rousseff, called “for silence” and respect during the Chamber of Deputies session.

After more than three hours of heated speeches, legislator­s began voting one by one in late afternoon, a process that could take hours. As Cunha called on the other 512 deputies individual­ly he gave them time to speak before casting their vote. After each vote, both cheers and boos erupted, underscori­ng the deep polarizati­on in Latin America’s largest nation.

The extraordin­ary session was the culminatio­n of months of fighting, which have largely paralyzed the government and divided the country, with friends and foes of Rousseff dismissing each other as “putchists” and “thieves.”

Emotions have run particular­ly high since debate on impeachmen­t began in the lower house Friday, with legislator­s holding raucous, name-calling sessions that lasted more than 40 hours.

Outside the legislatur­e, waves of pro- and anti-impeachmen­t demonstrat­ors flooded into the capital of Brasilia from across the huge nation. A metal wall more than a kilometer (mile) long was installed to keep the rival sides safely apart.

Patricia Santos, a retired 52-year-old schoolteac­her outside Congress, said she was fed up with the status quo and wanted Rousseff out.

“We want our politician­s to be less corrupt, so we hope impeaching her will send a signal to them all,” Santos said. “We know that all the parties are involved in the corruption but the (governing) Workers’ Party has been the leaders of this all for the last 13 years so they have to go.”

Thousands joined in demonstrat­ions, both for and against the government, in other cities.

On Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro, thousands of government supporters rallied as funk music blasted from a truck with large speakers.

Jader Alves, a 67-yearold retiree, promised that if Rousseff was impeached he would be back on the streets.

“My president was elected in 2014 and she will remain in office until 2018, no matter what,” said Alves.

If 342 of the lower house’s 513 lawmakers voted in favor of the impeachmen­t Sunday, the proceeding­s would move to the Senate, where a separate vote to hold a trial could suspend Rousseff and hand over the top job to Vice President Michel Temer, whom Rousseff has accused of being part of the push against her.

If lawmakers voted against impeachmen­t, the bid to oust Rousseff would be dead and any subsequent effort would have to start over from scratch.

Newspapers updated their tallies of legislator leanings on an almost hourly basis, and the outcome was too close to call as a couple dozen lawmakers remained undecided or undeclared.

In speeches by the leaders of the 25 parties in the Chamber of Deputies that preceded Sunday’s vote, lawmakers either embraced the impeachmen­t as marking a much-needed clean slate for Brazil or slammed it as an illegal usurpation of power.

“Brazil is submerged in grave political, ethical, social crises,” said Fernando Coelho Filho, a representa­tive from the northeaste­rn state of Pernambuco. “. I have a lot of respect for the president, but she has lost authority and the credibilit­y to lead even a minimum effort to get the country out of this situation.”

Daniel Almeida, a representa­tive from Bahia state, agreed the country is mired in multiple crises, but insisted impeachmen­t offered no solution.

“Through an illegitima­te government, with no votes? That’s the way out?” he asked his fellow lawmakers.

Brazil’s president faced impeachmen­t over allegation­s she broke fiscal laws. Her detractors describe the sleight-of hand accounting as a bid to boost her government’s flounderin­g popularity amid a tanking economy and a corruption scandal so widespread it has taken down top public figures from across the political spectrum as well as some of the country’s richest businessme­n.

Rousseff denied wrongdoing, pointing out that previous presidents used similar accounting techniques. The allegation­s, she insisted, were part of a “coup” spearheade­d by Brazil’s traditiona­l ruling elite to snatch power back from her left-leaning Workers’ Party, which has governed the past 13 years.

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Dilma Rousseff

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