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Brazil's main opposition party divided on support to a possible Temer government

Tuesday, April 26th 2016 - 09:11 UTC
Full article 7 comments
PSDB will support a government led by Michel Temer from the aisles of Congress if Rousseff is unseated, but the party is split over whether to join his cabinet. PSDB will support a government led by Michel Temer from the aisles of Congress if Rousseff is unseated, but the party is split over whether to join his cabinet.
Party leader Aecio Neves, said last week that he does not want party members to accept ministerial positions in a Temer cabinet. Party leader Aecio Neves, said last week that he does not want party members to accept ministerial positions in a Temer cabinet.
But Senator Jose Serra, a former health minister who has his own presidential ambitions, is keen to be a minister and Temer wants him in But Senator Jose Serra, a former health minister who has his own presidential ambitions, is keen to be a minister and Temer wants him in

Brazil's largest opposition party is divided over how strongly to back a new interim government if it succeeds in having President Dilma Rousseff stripped of office, as it eyes a run at the presidency in 2018, senior members said on Monday.

 The Brazilian Social Democracy Party (PSDB) will support a government led by Vice President Michel Temer from the aisles of Congress if Rousseff is unseated next month, but the party is split over whether to join his cabinet.

The Senate picked a committee stacked with supporters of impeachment that will report back on whether to put Rousseff on trial on charges of deliberately breaking budget laws to boost her re-election bid in 2014. Only five of the committee's 21 members have declared their support for the current president.

The lower house voted this month there were grounds for a trial. If the Senate agrees to put her on trial in a May 12 vote, as expected, Rousseff will immediately be suspended from office for the period of the proceedings.

Meanwhile, Temer, whose Brazilian Democratic Movement Party (PMDB) quit the government last month, is preparing to govern. Former central bank governor Henrique Meirelles is emerging as the top candidate to become finance minister.

Investors are looking to Temer to restore confidence in Latin America's largest economy. Brazil was stripped of its coveted investment-grade credit rating in December amid the worst recession in decades and an acute fiscal crisis.

Business leaders are pressing the PSDB to join Temer to help restore credibility in economic policy, but many inside the party are wary of the risks in terms of future elections of failing to pull the country out of its worst recession since the 1930s.

Party leader Aecio Neves, who narrowly lost to Rousseff in 2014 and is expected to run again in 2018, said last week that he does not want party members to accept ministerial positions in a Temer cabinet.

However, Senator Jose Serra, a former health minister who has his own presidential ambitions, is keen to be a minister and the vice president wants him in, said lawmaker Bruno Araujo, leader of the PSDB in the lower house.

Araujo said the majority position within the PSDB ahead of the month's vote in the lower house had been to support Temer, but not enter his government. Since then, pressure has increased on the PSDB from many sectors of Brazilian society to help make a Temer government succeed, he said.

“There is a growing feeling in the party that if it does not take the risk of joining the Temer cabinet, Brazilians will suspect it wanted Temer to fail,” Araujo said.

PSDB will meet on May 3 to set its position, mindful that if it stays out of the government and Temer turns the country around, it could pay the price in the 2018 elections.

Serra was interested in becoming finance minister, a position that would enhance his presidential hopes for 2018, but party insiders say Temer will offer him other portfolios, such as health.

Categories: Politics, Brazil.

Top Comments

Disclaimer & comment rules
  • Jack Bauer

    The fact is that the opposition is just a bunch of pathetic wimps. If they had balls, they would have blocked Dilma's populist policies a long time ago, in the same manner that the PT acted when they were the opposition (until end of 2002). To make things worse, the opposition insists on washing its dirty laundry in public, and people just get fed up with all their internal squabbling and their incapacity to unite for the good of Brazil.

    Apr 26th, 2016 - 02:47 pm 0
  • :o))

    Wondering why the famous politicians like F. Collor, P. Maluf, etc. are so quiet?

    Apr 26th, 2016 - 03:55 pm 0
  • Jack Bauer

    As they have nothing constructive to say, it's just as well that they shut up.

    Apr 26th, 2016 - 04:54 pm 0
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