Coup in Brazil, British comment


This video says about itself:

With Rousseff Out, Brazil’s Interim President Installs Conservative All-White, All-Male Cabinet

13 May 2016

Brazil’s former vice president, Michel Temer, assumed power as interim president Thursday after the country’s Senate voted to suspend President Dilma Rousseff and begin impeachment proceedings over accusations she tampered with accounts in order to hide a budget shortfall. Rousseff called the move a coup. Temer is a member of the opposition PMDB party and has been implicated in Brazil’s massive corruption scandal involving state-owned oil company Petrobras.

He was sworn in Thursday along with a new Cabinet that is all white and all men, making this the first time since 1979 that no women have been in the Cabinet. We are joined from Rio de Janeiro by Andrew Fishman, researcher and reporter for The Intercept, who discusses the role of the United States in protests against Rousseff, and the background of Temer’s new Cabinet members.

By Diane Abbott in Britain:

Brazil‘s coup is an assault on democracy

Wednesday 25th May 2016

The suspension of democratically elected President Dilma Rousseff is a denial of the clear wishes of the Brazilian people, writes DIANE ABBOTT

THE recent coup against Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff is extraordinary and has received relatively little attention in the British media.

The startling fact is that, while more than 50 million Brazilians voted to re-elect Dilma Rousseff as their president in 2014, it took only 55 senators to take the decision to remove her.

So they have suspended her for 180 days in order to make her face an impeachment trial over accusations of budget manipulations. The situation is a complete negation of democracy.

Ernesto Samper, general secretary of the Union of South American Nations, has said that Rousseff remains “the legitimate leader” of Brazil and retains her “democratic legitimacy,” adding that the decision to initiate an impeachment trial against her was “compromising the democratic governability of the region in a dangerous way.”

Responding to the fact that the impeachment effort against the ousted Brazilian president is based on allegations that she manipulated budget accounts, Samper warned that it set a dangerous precedent by criminalising what he sees (rightly or wrongly) as standard government budget management practices.

Brazil’s trade unions, Workers Party (PT) and social movements have simply labelled it a coup, and in Latin America itself, only Argentina’s right-wing government has publicly supported the new right-wing administration.

However, the global outcry has been less than we might have expected.

With Dilma gone, vice-president Michel Temer has become president. If the impeachment succeeds, Temer will be installed permanently for the remainder of the presidential term.

Polls have shown Temer has little support among voters, with 2 per cent saying they would vote for him in 2018.

Interestingly Rousseff’s most vocal defender — and former president — Lula has support from over 20 per cent of the electorate.

In less than a week, the nature of the new government was quickly exposed as one of hardline neoliberalism — an agenda clearly contrary to the will of Brazilians when they re-elected Rousseff.

Nearly immediately, they announced that they intend to fire at least 4,000 public workers and it has been reported that ministers have to review the payrolls of their ministries in order to seek to cut 25 per cent of workers.

Meanwhile, new health minister Ricardo Barros said the size of Brazil’s highly popular public health programme must be reviewed, even though universal access to healthcare is constitutionally guaranteed, and this is within a context of the ongoing public health challenges posed by the Zika outbreak.

Tellingly and astonishingly, the Ministry of Culture, the Ministry of Agrarian Development, the Ministry of Science and Technology (merged into another ministry), the Ministry of Women and the Ministry of Human Rights have all been abolished.

The Ministry of Racial Equality was abolished on the 128th anniversary of the abolition of slavery in Brazil.

In an incredibly diverse country, the new cabinet has no women, no black ministers, or no-one who identifies as gay, lesbian or transgender.

As Brazilian Senator Cristovam Buarque, who voted in favour of Rousseff’s impeachment, tweeted: “Seems strange to me a cabinet without women, without representatives from minority groups or social movements.”

Rousseff herself responded by saying that now “inequality has a clear face in Brazil. It’s the face of women, black people, the poor, and the youth.”

Why does this matter to those of us interested in democracy and international development here in Europe? Not only because we should support democracy throughout the world, but also because of what Brazil has achieved in recent years in terms of social inclusion.

At the start of the millennium, about a third of Brazil’s population languished beneath the international poverty line ($2 a day), and about 15 per cent was living on less than $1.25 a day.

Yet, since the Workers Party has been in power — with Lula (2003-2011) and then Rousseff in the presidency — according to Brazil’s Institute of Applied Economic Research (IPEA), between 2004-2014 the country has reduced poverty by 63 per cent.

As an article in Foreign Affairs in 2014 noted: “In the first decade of the new century, some 40 million Brazilians moved from poverty into the middle class, per capita household income shot up by 27 per cent, and inequality dropped dramatically — unlike in every other BRIC country (Russia, India, and China), where it rose. Today, Brazil still faces many challenges, from an economic downturn to corruption scandals to the end of the commodity boom.

But the country’s incredible success in reducing poverty and inequality can and should light the way for further progress, both there and abroad.”

In particular, from a development angle, specific programmes offered possible lessons internationally.

The Fome Zero (Zero Hunger) programme has featured more than 40 different programmes run by close to 20 government ministries.

The most significant of these, Bolsa Familia (Family Grant), saw Brazil put combating poverty and inequality centre stage, giving families small but life-changing amounts of cash in return for having their children vaccinated and being in school.

Not only did Bolsa Familia reach more than a quarter of the population (and 85 per cent of the poor), but the payments, tiny though they are, doubled the incomes of Brazil’s most destitute families.

In its first three years, extreme poverty fell by 15 per cent, and by 2014 the percentage of Brazilians living in extreme poverty had declined to less than 3 per cent — a level the World Bank considers equivalent to eradication.

Additionally, vaccination rates reached 99 per cent, and infant mortality dropped 40 per cent in a decade, with deaths from malnutrition down 58 per cent.

Of course, Brazil also faces massive challenges and difficulties but democratically elected governments, which at least have a keen focus on reducing poverty and inequality, deserve our international support.

Let’s not be silent at this vital time for the country and the region.

Diane Abbott MP is shadow international development secretary. For more information on Brazil you can follow No Coup in Brazil on Facebook and Twitter. This article first appeared on Leftfootforward.org.

Brazil Leak Shows Senate Chief Wants to Halt Corruption Probe: here.

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