Parties abandon Brazil president

Dilma Rousseff
Dilma Rousseff

Rio De Janeiro — President Dilma Rousseff’s chances of surviving impeachment are growing slimmer now that three parties have decamped from her governing coalition in 24 hours and Brazilian legislators begin preparing for a crucial vote on the question expected this weekend.

The pull-outs of the mid-size centrist parties caused despondency among members of Rousseff’ left-leaning Workers’ Party ahead of the vote expected on Sunday in the Chamber of Deputies. That vote will determine whether the impeachment process moves ahead based on allegations that Rousseff’s administration violated fiscal rules.

The pro-impeachment camp needs two-thirds of the 513 votes in the lower house, or 342 votes, to send the proceedings to the Senate for a possible trial. According to a tally by the newspaper Folha de S Paulo, 284 legislators have come out for impeachment, while 114 are opposed and 115 are undecided.

While the outcome is still too close to call, the pull-outs by the majority of the 36 deputies for the Social Democratic Party, the Progressive Party with 47 deputies and the Brazilian Republican Party with 22 legislators made it that much harder for Rousseff to defeat the vote.

In a rare bit of positive news for the government, leaders of the Democratic Labor Party pledged to cast their party’s 20 votes against impeachment.

But the loss of three more parties was a blow for the governing coalition, coming about two weeks after the Brazilian Democratic Movement Party, the country’s largest party, also quit. It has 66 deputies in the lower house.

“Ministers close to Dilma believe the battle against impeachment is virtually lost,” Monica Bergamo, a respected political columnist for Folha de S Paulo, wrote on Wednesday. “Not all of them have definitively thrown in the towel, but the consensus is that the government is going through its worst moment.”

Rousseff has seen her approval ratings tumble amid the worst recession in decades, a spike in both joblessness and inflation, and a sprawling probe of corruption at the state-run energy company Petrobras, which over the past two years has ensnared dozens of top politicians across the political spectrum as well as some of Brazil’s richest and most powerful business executives. — AFP

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