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Roussef asks the Supreme Court for an injunction to suspend impeachment vote

Friday, April 15th 2016 - 09:29 UTC
Full article 15 comments
Attorney general, Jose Eduardo Cardozo, asked the top court for an injunction to suspend Sunday's Lower House vote, arguing flaws in the impeachment process. Attorney general, Jose Eduardo Cardozo, asked the top court for an injunction to suspend Sunday's Lower House vote, arguing flaws in the impeachment process.
Rousseff has become an unpopular leader already struggling with Brazil's worst economic crisis in decades and a historic corruption scandal Rousseff has become an unpopular leader already struggling with Brazil's worst economic crisis in decades and a historic corruption scandal
If the Senate accepts her impeachment, Rousseff would be suspended and replaced by Vice President Michel Temer as soon as early May If the Senate accepts her impeachment, Rousseff would be suspended and replaced by Vice President Michel Temer as soon as early May

Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff resorted to the Supreme Court on Thursday in a last ditch attempt to avert a critical impeachment vote in Congress that could lead to her removal from office. Rousseff's attorney general, Jose Eduardo Cardozo, asked the top court for an injunction to suspend Sunday's Lower House vote until the full court can rule on what he called procedural flaws in the impeachment process.

 Rousseff, an unpopular leader already struggling with Brazil's worst economic crisis in decades and a historic corruption scandal has lost support within her governing coalition.

She faces the growing likelihood of defeat in the Lower House vote, which would send her impeachment to the Senate for trial on charges of breaking budget laws.

If the Senate accepts her impeachment, Rousseff would be suspended and replaced by Vice President Michel Temer as soon as early May pending a trial that could last six months.

Rousseff had not been expected to resort to the Supreme Court until after Sunday's vote. Cardozo's request to the court was seen as a sign her government now expects defeat.

Rousseff's opponents are just nine votes short of victory in the lower house, with 333 lawmakers backing impeachment, 124 opposed and 56 undecided or declining to respond, according to a survey by the Estado de S.Paulo newspaper.

An injunction by the Supreme Court suspending Sunday's vote is possible but unlikely, because several of its justices have recently said they do not think the court should interfere with the legislature's jurisdiction in the impeachment battle.

The injunction request will be decided by Justice Edson Fachin. He is the most recent appointee to the court by Rousseff, though his rulings have not always favored her government.

Brazil's largest political party, Rousseff's main coalition partner until it broke away two weeks ago, said most of its members in the lower house will back deposing her.

Leonardo Picciani, the lower chamber leader for the party, the Brazilian Democratic Movement Party, or PMDB, told reporters that 90% of the 68 members of his caucus would vote for impeachment.

However Temer, who would serve out Rousseff's term until 2018 if she is ousted by the Senate, has little popular support. He would face a daunting task restoring confidence in a country where dozens of political leaders, including close associates of his, are under investigation for corruption.

Vowing to fight to the end, Rousseff met with her political advisers as her government scrambled for votes to block impeachment, but defections by several centrist allies in her crumbling coalition have seriously compromised that effort.

Cardozo, Rousseff's former justice minister and the government's main legal adviser, has said previously that the impeachment process was unconstitutional. In his appeal to the Supreme Court on Thursday, he asked it to annul the report to the Lower House by a congressional committee that recommended impeachment on Monday.

He told a news conference Rousseff's defense had been obstructed in the committee and that testimony from a former senator of the president, Senator Delcidio Amaral, was obtained as part of a plea bargain deal and should have been considered inadmissible

Categories: Politics, Brazil.

Top Comments

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  • Skip

    Roussef is trying to thwart the will of the legislature..... I believe Brasileiro calls this a coup.

    Apr 15th, 2016 - 10:26 am 0
  • L0B0MAU

    - In a Nut-Shell:
    IF she does stay/go:
    = NO Difference in economy
    = MORE Sophistication in the modus operandi of corruption, money laundering, bribes
    = LESS Powers to the investigators
    = WORST days ahead for Brazil.

    Apr 15th, 2016 - 01:38 pm 0
  • El Diego

    Gisela and I just spent some time in Rio buying some real estate and taking advantage of the great investment opportunities right now in that beautiful city. We are very optimistic that Brazil is getting on the track to recovery and indeed, have two meetings with American investment funds next week about some acquisitions in the oil and gas space at great prices.

    Apr 15th, 2016 - 06:54 pm 0
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