Brazil court hits Rousseff again, fueling impeachment talk

Agence France-Presse

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Brazil court hits Rousseff again, fueling impeachment talk

Fernando Bizerra Jr.

The Federal Accounts Court says her accounting practices, including taking what amounted to unauthorized loans from state-owned banks to make up for budget shortfalls, breaks the law

BRASILIA, Brazil – Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff suffered a major new setback Wednesday, October 7, when a court ruled that her government’s accounting practices were illegal, handing ammunition to opponents threatening impeachment proceedings.

The decision by the Federal Accounts Court or TCU was the latest blow to Rousseff, less than a year into her second term. The court said that her government’s accounting practices in 2014, including taking what amounted to unauthorized loans from state-owned banks to make up for budget shortfalls, broke the law.

“The accounts are not a condition where they can be approved. We recommend their rejection,” the lead judge, Augusto Nardes, said after the court’s panel voted unanimously.

The government says it did nothing illegal and that it was merely juggling funds in line with previous practices.

The court’s ruling, which next goes to Congress, was likely to give powerful impetus to Rousseff’s congressional opponents, led by the scandal-plagued speaker of the lower house, Eduardo Cunha, who has repeatedly threatened to push for impeachment.

Late Tuesday, another judicial body, the electoral court, or TSE, ruled in favor of probing alleged illegalities in Rousseff’s 2014 re-election campaign.

That ruling will not immediately lead to sanctions, instead opening the door to a messy legal and political battle that in theory could result in Rousseff’s narrow 2014 victory being declared invalid — and new elections being organized.

Especially worryingly for Rousseff was that one of the allegations in the complaint brought to the TSE by the opposition PSDB party was that some donations to the president’s re-election coffers were linked in part to the massive Petrobras corruption scandal shaking the country.

Rousseff chaired Petrobras, the state oil giant, during the main period of the kickback and political payoff scandal that cost the company more than $2 billion in 2014.

But the scandal — which has already seen dozens of politicians, high-ranking executives and lobbyists accused of corruption — has so far left Rousseff relatively unscathed.

 

– Cliff edge – 

Now facing two legal assaults and with the country plunged into steep recession, the president’s rule is on a cliff edge.

According to the latest opinion poll, approval for Rousseff, from the long-dominant Workers’ Party (PT), is at just 10 percent.

The government had made a failed last-ditch attempt to delay Wednesday’s session at the TCU, appealing to the Supreme Court over Nardes’ alleged lack of impartiality.

The rejection of the legality of the government accounts was the first such ruling since 1937, when the 1936 accounts were thrown out, officials said.

Tuesday’s ruling by the TSE electoral court, meanwhile, was the first time the court has opened such a probe against a sitting president.

The complaint to the election court against Rousseff and her vice president Michel Temer alleged that they engaged in “abuse of economic power, and of fraud, by funding campaign expenses… with donations from Petrobras contractor companies as part of the bribes distribution.”

With Brazilian politics in so much upheaval, analysts say that the possible fallout from the court proceedings is hard to predict, as is the likelihood of Rousseff being forced from office.

Further muddying the waters, her nemesis, Cunha, is himself fighting allegations that he took a $5 million bribe in the Petrobras scheme and is hiding money in Swiss bank accounts. – Damian Wroclavsky, AFP/Rappler.com

 

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