Finally, Brazil’s President Impeached by Senate

Zacheaus Somorin with agency report

Finally, Brazilian Senate has impeached President Dilma Rousseff from office for manipulating the budget, a claim she has consistently denied.

The impeachment has put an to end the 13 years in power of her left-wing Workers’ Party.
Sixty-one senators voted in favour of her impeachment and 20 against, meeting the two-thirds majority needed to remove her from the presidency.

The acting President, Michel Temer will serve out Ms Rousseff’s term, which ends on January 1, 2019.
Temer, from the centre-right PMDB party, is expected to be officially sworn.

Rousseff had been suspended in May after the Senate voted to go ahead with the impeachment process.
She was accused of moving funds between government budgets, which is illegal under Brazilian law. Her critics said she was trying to plug deficit holes in popular social programmes to boost her chances of being re-elected for a second term in October 2014.

Rousseff fought the allegations, which she said amounted to a coup d’etat.
She argued that her right-wing political rivals had been trying to remove her from office ever since she was re-elected.

“From the day after I was elected, several measures were taken to destabilise my government. And you have been systematically making accusations against me,” she said when she defended herself in the Senate on Monday.
She said that she was being ousted because she had allowed a wide-ranging corruption investigation to go ahead which resulted in many high-profile politicians being charged. Dilma Rousseff’s impeachment trial in the Senate has raised important questions about Brazil’s democratic institutions.

Her fiscal manoeuvres were thoroughly examined during the sessions, but it was not just that which was on trial.
Her government policies, her U-turn on the economy after the election and corruption in her party were constantly part of the debate.

Also, as the trial unfolded, Temer’s interim government started its work reforming the economy and outlining new policies.

Senators – and Brazilians – knew that the question of condemning Rousseff went beyond just deciding technically whether she was guilty or not.

Temer, who will govern until January 1, 2019, has promised to boost Brazil’s economy, which is going through its longest and deepest recession in the past quarter of a century.
His critics have already warned that he plans to cut many of the popular social programmes introduced by the Workers’ Party.

But senators who voted in favour of her impeachment said it was Rousseff and the Workers’ Party who were corrupt and needed to go. Brazilians have been divided on the issue, with many expressing their support and loyalty to Rousseff while others have taken part in large demonstrations demanding that she stand down.

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