Rio De Janeiro – Brazil Senate Starts Impeachment Trial Of President Rousseff

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    Brazil's suspended President Dilma Rousseff speaks during a meeting with people from pro-democracy movements in Brasilia, Brazil, August 24, 2016. REUTERS/Ueslei MarcelinoRio De Janeiro – Brazil’s Senate on Thursday began deliberating whether to permanently remove President Dilma Rousseff from office, the final step in a leadership fight that has paralyzed Congress and cast a pall over a nation in the midst of a severe recession.

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    Brazil’s first female president is accused of illegally shifting money between government budgets to mask yawning deficits. Detractors say she did that to shore up support and argue those maneuvers exacerbated the recession in Latin America’s largest economy.

    Rousseff denies wrongdoing and says her enemies, including the country’s elite who have fumed about her Workers Party’s lock on power the last 13 years, are conducting a “coup.”

    Senators are now embarking “on their most somber duties,” said Ricardo Lewandowski, the chief justice of the country’s highest court who is overseeing the trial. “To judge the president, (senators) must act with the utmost impartiality and objectivity, considering only the facts they are presented and the laws.”

    The impeachment push started late last year when Eduard Cunha, then the speaker of the lower House of Deputies and a long-time Rousseff nemesis, introduced the measure. In April, his chamber overwhelmingly passed it. Then in May, the Senate voted 55-22 to impeach and suspend Rousseff for up to 180 days.

    Vice President Michel Temer, Rousseff’s one-time ally who turned nemesis, took over. If the Senate votes to permanently remove Rousseff, Temer will serve the rest of her term, which goes through 2018.

    Several days of testimony, including an address by Rousseff on Monday, will wrap up in a final vote next week.


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    2 Comments
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    eli845
    eli845
    7 years ago

    I think that is nothing compared to what Obama has done so far. But here they are a bunch of wooses. Afraid of being called raisist.

    abilenetx
    abilenetx
    7 years ago

    Rio was worried about some of the kids that played a few practical jokes during the Olympics, I think they have bigger problems than that now. The kids paid their fine and Rio is still on their backs, what a joke country. Maybe the committee that gives the countries their assignment should be looked into for favoritism.