Brazilian lawmakers recommend impeaching Rousseff

Vote by congressional committee a big setback for president as political crisis deepens

Anti-impeachment protestors attend a rally in support of Brazil’s president Dilma Rousseff in Rio de Janeiro on Monday night. Photograph: Mario Tama/Getty Images

A committee of Brazil's lower house of Congress has voted to recommend the impeachment of President Dilma Rousseff, who faces charges of breaking budget laws to support her re-election in 2014.

A vote in the full lower house is expected to take place on Sunday. If two-thirds vote in favour, the impeachment will be sent to the Senate.

If the upper house decides by a simple majority to put Ms Rousseff on trial, she will immediately be suspended for up to six months while the Senate decides her fate, and vice president Michel Temer will take office as acting president.

It would be the first impeachment of a Brazilian president since 1992 when Fernando Collor de Mello faced massive protests and resigned moments before his conviction on corruption charges by the senate.

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The 65-member congressional committee voted by 38 to 27 on Monday to recommend impeachment over claims Ms Rousseff manipulatd government accounts to hide a growing deficit.

A former leftist guerrilla, Ms Rousseff has denied any wrongdoing and rallied the rank-and-file of her Workers’ Party to oppose what she has called a coup against a democratically elected president.

Speaking to thousands of supporters in Rio de Janeiro, Ms Rousseff's predecessor and Workers' Party founder Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said Brazilian business elites were pressuring lawmakers to remove the president. Mr Lula, who is under investigation in a graft probe, said he had convinced Ms Rousseff to return to policies that favoured Brazil's poor.

Political storm

Caught in a political storm fuelled by Brazil's worst recession in decades and the country's biggest corruption scandal, Ms Rousseff has lost key coalition allies in Congress, including her main partner, vice president Temer's PMDB party.

The rift between Ms Rousseff and her vice president reached breaking point on Monday after an audio message of Mr Temer calling for a government of national unity was released apparently by mistake, further muddying Brazil’s political water.

Mr Temer’s 14-minute audio message sent to members of his own PMDB party via the WhatsApp messaging app showed he was preparing to take over if Ms Rousseff is forced from office.

The audio was posted on the website of the Folha de S.Paulo newspaper and confirmed to Reuters by Mr Temer's aides as authentic. Aides said it was accidentally released and they quickly sent another message asking legislators to disregard it.

In his message, Mr Temer said he did not want to get ahead of events, but he had to show the country he was ready to lead it if needed.

"We need a government of national salvation and national unity," Mr Temer said in the audio. "We need to unite all the political parties, and all the parties should be ready to collaborate to drag Brazil out of this crisis."

Ms Rousseff's chief of staff Jaques Wagner called the vice president a "conspirator" and said he should resign if Ms Rousseff survives impeachment.

“Having joined the conspiracy, he should resign when it is defeated, because the climate will become unbearable,” Mr Wagner told reporters.

Mr Wagner said the government would continue working to muster enough votes to block impeachment in the lower house, encouraged by the fact that in committee the opposition had not won the two thirds it will need in the plenary.

The committee vote, however, is expected to sway undecided lawmakers to vote for Ms Rousseff's removal, said Claudio Couto, a politics professor at the Fundacao Getulio Vargas think tank.

“It has a snowball effect. With each approval, the chances of impeachment clearing the next chamber increases,” Mr Couto said. “The wider the margin, the more momentum impeachment will gather.”

The Brasilia-based consultancy Arko Advice said committee votes for impeachment were higher than expected and it raised to 65 per cent the odds of Ms Rousseff being unseated by Congress.

Polarised country

The latest moves in Brazil's political crisis have the country on edge as it faces not only a government meltdown but its worst recession in decades. The political chaos in the capital, Brasilia, is playing out less than 100 days before the nation plays host to the first Olympic Games to be held in South America – an event that will cast the world's eyes on Brazil.

The battle over Ms Rousseff’s impeachment has polarised the nation of 200 million people and brought the government of Latin America’s largest economy to a virtual standstill.

The proposed impeachment is also taking place as Brazil faces its largest corruption investigation, targeting a sprawling kickback scheme at state-run oil company Petrobras.

Prosecutors say billions of dollars in bribes were paid over several years and have implicated not only members of Ms Rousseff’s Workers’ Party but members of the opposition leading the charge to impeach her.

Eduardo Cunha, the speaker of Brazil's lower house, a Rousseff enemy who is guiding the impeachment proceedings, faces charges of accepting millions in bribes in connection to the Petrobras case, while the head of Brazil's Senate is also caught up in the investigation.

To battle to prevent impeachment approval in the full lower house vote, Ms Rousseff’s government is trying to win over lawmakers by offering government jobs that became vacant when the PMDB quit her governing coalition two weeks ago.

The Brazilian real strengthened nearly 3 per cent before Monday’s vote to an eight-month peak on expectations that the committee would decide to impeach s Rousseff. Investors are betting that her removal will issue in more business-friendly policies to pull Brazil’s economy out of a tailspin.

Reuters