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Brazilean President Rousseff looses another top official to corruption

Monday, August 8th 2011 - 04:37 UTC
Full article 14 comments
Rousseff’s record: Three ministers and a top official downed in seven months Rousseff’s record: Three ministers and a top official downed in seven months

The Brazilian congressional opposition promised to block legislative work in both Houses until the government accepts the creation of a Special Investigation Commission, CPI, to look into alleged corruption practices in several ministries from the administration of President Dilma Rousseff.

The initiative is in response to the recent ousting of three cabinet ministers and last Saturday’s resignation of the Executive Secretary from the Agriculture Secretary Milton Ortolan, following on press exposures.

The CPI task if finally created is to investigate the naming of relatives and friends in top paid jobs at Conab (Brazil’s National Supply Company) which depends from the Agriculture ministry.

According to Brazilian press reports the naming took place when current Agriculture minister Wagner Rossi was head of Conab in June 2007, and many of those resolutions have his signature.

Rossi belongs to the ruling coalition of ten parties’ main associate, PMDB and is a close ally of Vice-president Michel Temer. All the names involved in the claim published by the Brazilian press are related to PMDB Congress members and their relatives or former wives or mistresses.

“We are not going to vote any issues in any of the Houses to protest the government’s actions to prevent a formal investigation. We are going to radicalize our position because we want some sensitivity from the political class”, said ACM Netto, an opposition Lower House member.

Neto added that a formal complaint involving the Agriculture ministry will be filed with the Attorney General’s Office.

However Neto admits that the ruling coalition is so vast that it is virtually ‘armoured’ against any such actions as naming an investigation commission. “But only an investigation commission can bring to light all these events”.

“We need to check what is going on in many ministries. We know that after the ‘mensalao’, another way the government is using to please its allies with favours is distributing jobs and well paid posts. This has led to an endemic corrosion in most ministries”, said Duarte Nogueira head of the opposition in the Lower House.

The ‘mensalao’ refers to the first government of former President Lula da Silva when members of Congress were paid a generous monthly stipend to support government legislation since they lacked sufficient votes.

When this was exposed in 2006, several ministers, advisors of Lula da Silva and most of the board of the ruling Workers Party was forced to resign, although many were not left abandoned but given other opportunities in the grotesque Brazilian bureaucracy.

“The original intention of a CPI was to investigate corruption and nepotism allegations in the Transport ministry, but now we must add Agriculture”, said Demostenes Torres, an important Senator from the opposition.

So far three ministers have stepped down from President Rousseff’s cabinet: first of all was cabinet chief Antonio Palloci over enrichment allegations (he was also involved in the ‘mensalao’ scheme of Lula da Silva first presidency); Transport minister Alfredo Nascimento was forced to resign following claims in the press he collected a percentage on public works contracts; Nelson Jobim, the respected Defence secretary and former Justice had to step down following derogatory statements about the new cabinet chief and institutional relations, both women and close allies of Ms Rousseff.

Finally last Saturday a top official at the agriculture ministry tendered his resignation following corruption allegations published in the press.

Brazilian newsmagazine Veja reported that Executive Secretary Milton Ortolan had allowed a lobbyist to set up an office within the ministry to help businesses get contracts in exchange for illicit payments. The agriculture ministry said Ortolan tendered his “irrevocable” resignation but denied wrongdoing.

This is another blow for President Rousseff’s seven-month old government. She has lost three cabinet ministers in the last three months and another could fall in coming days, all of which is straining relations with members of her coalition and slowing economic reforms in Congress.

Events are also seen as a ferocious internal struggle between the two main partners of the ruling coalition: the Workers Party of President Rousseff and Lula da Silva and the PMDB that holds the Vice-presidency, controls the Senate and several important governorships. Further more without the PMDB it is hard to see how President Rousseff could have legislation approved.

The several incidents have forced former president Lula da Silva to openly come out in support of Ms Rousseff.
 

Categories: Politics, Brazil.

Top Comments

Disclaimer & comment rules
  • GeoffWard2

    To lose one minister is unfortunate,

    to lose two ministers is a problem,

    to lose three ministers is an issue,

    to lose four ministers is a pattern,

    to lose five ministers is a government in crisis,

    to lose six ministers is Dilma saying to the Brasilian public “I am sick to the back teeth with the endemic corruption that is crippling Brasil, and I intend to rip it out from the body politic and all arms of government”.

    All power to her elbow!
    And may God give her the balls - and the time - to see it through.

    Aug 08th, 2011 - 09:45 am 0
  • lsolde

    She must be a no-nonsense lady, Geoff.

    Aug 08th, 2011 - 10:34 am 0
  • Forgetit87

    She didn't lose six ministers, Geoff, and neither has she (yet) lost another one, as Mercopress is implying, for nothing has been proved against Mr. Rossi. That opposition parties would try and remove government nominations is unsurprising; that's what they do.

    Btw, I wish I could have seen you pulling this tired “scandalized self-righteous common man” act when we were discussing Britain's own problems regarding police corruption and government misbehavior - this one a scandal that really reached all levels of society. A whole banquet for people like you, people who like to rant to show off how righteous they are. You mysteriously let the ball drop, though.

    Aug 08th, 2011 - 11:21 am 0
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