MercoPress, en Español

Montevideo, November 21st 2024 - 18:09 UTC

 

 

Brazil's Justice minister Moro threatens to resign if Bolsonaro changes head of the Federal Police

Friday, April 24th 2020 - 08:33 UTC
Full article 1 comment
Moro is one of the most popular ministers in the government due to his record fighting corruption as a federal judge Moro is one of the most popular ministers in the government due to his record fighting corruption as a federal judge

Brazilian Justice Minister Sergio Moro has threatened to resign if President Jair Bolsonaro goes ahead with plans to change the head of the federal police, according to reports in the daily O Estado de Sao Paulo. Moro insists it is the Justice minister that must appoint the Federal Police chief.

Moro is one of the most popular ministers in the government due to his record fighting corruption as a federal judge and Bolsonaro originally touted him as a “super minister” in charge of implementing a law-and-order agenda.

Financial markets retreated on the news of instability in the presidential cabinet, with Brazil’s currency weakening to a record low of 5.50 against the dollar and the benchmark Bovespa stock index slipping as much as 2.6%.

Moro’s departure along with the head of Brazil’s federal police would be a serious blow to Bolsonaro’s argument that he is bolstering the fight against graft with investigations free of political interference.

Moro’s spokeswoman said the minister would not confirm he had said he would resign.

Newspaper Folha de S.Paulo first reported Moro’s possible departure in an article published to its website, saying he had asked to quit and Bolsonaro was working to change his mind.

Moro’s role in the government has served as a symbol of the fight against corruption, which was central to Bolsonaro’s 2018 campaign. The justice minister’s performance was rated “good” or “great” by 53% of Brazilians surveyed in December by pollster Datafolha, compared to just 30% for Bolsonaro’s performance.

Yet the relationship between the two has grown tense, especially as Bolsonaro showed interest in changing the leadership of the federal police force in Rio de Janeiro, where he built his political base in three decades as a lawmaker.

Moro and Federal Police Chief Mauricio Valeixo, who was tapped for his role by the minister, resisted suggestions for the Rio job publicly floated by Bolsonaro, leading the president to propose in August that Valeixo himself could be replaced.

 

Categories: Politics, Brazil.

Top Comments

Disclaimer & comment rules
  • Jack Bauer

    “Moro insists it is the Justice minister that must appoint the Federal Police chief.”

    What ?????

    No way, José....

    Law 13047/2014 clearly states that is a prerogative of the President.

    The truth is that when “Bolsonaro originally touted him as a “super minister” in charge of implementing a law-and-order agenda” he gave Moro 'carte-blanche' to do what had to be done, including to appoint the head of the Federal Police - very wise, based on the fact it would be Moro working closely with the Federal Police....not Bolsonaro.

    Moro knows the Law well-enough to not insist it was his (legal) prerogative...he was just holding Bolsonaro to his promise (when he was given “carte blanche”).

    Apr 26th, 2020 - 05:41 pm 0
Read all comments

Commenting for this story is now closed.
If you have a Facebook account, become a fan and comment on our Facebook Page!