Brazil’s
Democracy to Suffer Grievous Blow as Unelectable, Corrupt Neoliberal
Is Installed
Glenn
Greenwald
12
May, 2016
IN
2002, BRAZIL’S left-of-center
Workers’ Party (PT) ascended to the presidency when Lula da
Silva won
in a landslide over
the candidate of the center-right PSDB party (throughout
2002, “markets”
were indignant at
the mere prospect of PT’s victory). The PT remained in power
when Lula, in 2006, was re-elected in
another landslide against
a different PSDB candidate. PT’s enemies thought they had their
chance to get rid of PT in 2010, when Lula was barred by term limits
from running again, but their hopes were crushed when Lula’s
handpicked successor, the previously unknown Dilma Rousseff, won
by 12 points over
the same PSDB candidate who lost to Lula in 2002. In 2014, PT’s
enemies poured huge amounts of money and resources into defeating
her, believing that she was vulnerable and they had
finally found a star PSDB candidate, but
they lost again, this
time narrowly, as Dilma was re-elected with 54 million votes.
In
sum, PT has won four straight national elections — the last one
occurring just 18 months ago. Its opponents have vigorously tried —
and failed — to defeat it at the ballot box, largely due to
PT’s support among Brazil’s poor and working classes.
So if you’re a plutocrat with ownership of the nation’s largest and most influential media outlets, what do you do? You dispense with democracy altogether — after all, it keeps empowering candidates and policies you dislike — by exploiting your media outlets to incite unrest and then install a candidate who could never get elected on his own, yet will faithfully serve your political agenda and ideology.
That’s exactly what Brazil is going to do today. The Brazilian Senate will vote later today to agree to a trial on the lower House’s impeachment charges, which will automatically result in Dilma’s suspension from the presidency pending the end of the trial.
Her
successor will be Vice President Michel Temer of the PMDB party
(pictured above). So unlike impeachment in most other countries with
a presidential system, impeachment here will empower a person from a
different party than that of the elected president. In this
particular case, the person to be installed is awash in
corruption: He is accused by informants of involvement in an illegal
ethanol-purchasing scheme; he was just found guilty of, and fined
for, election-spending violations and faces
an eight-year ban on running for any office.
He’s deeply unpopular; only
2 percent would support him for
president and almost
60 percent wants him impeached (the
same number that favors Dilma’s impeachment). But he will
faithfully serve the interests of Brazil’s richest: He’s planning
to appoint
Goldman Sachs and IMF officials to
run the economy and otherwise install a totally
unrepresentative, neoliberal team (composed
in part of the same party — PSDB — that has lost four straight
elections to the PT).
None
of this is a defense of PT. That party — as even Lula
acknowledged to me in
my interview with him — is filled with serious corruption.
Dilma, in many critical ways, has been a failed president, and
she is deeply unpopular. They have often aligned with and served the
country’s elite at
the expense of their base of poor supporters.
The country is suffering economically and in almost every other way.
But the solution to that is to defeat them at the ballot box, not simply remove them and replace them with someone more suitable to the nation’s richest. Whatever damage PT is doing to Brazil, the plutocrats and their journalist-propagandists and the band of thieves in Brasilia engineering this travesty are far more dangerous. They are literally dismantling — crushing — democracy in the world’s fifth-largest country. Even The Economist — which is hostile to even the most moderate left-wing parties, hates PT, and wants Dilma to resign — has denounced impeachment as “a pretext for ousting an unpopular president” and just two weeks ago warned that “what is alarming is that those who are working for her removal are in many ways worse.” Before he became an active plotter in his own empowerment, Temer himself said last year that “impeachment is unthinkable, would create an institutional crisis. There is no judicial or political basis for it.”
The
biggest scam of all is that Brazilian media elites are justifying all
of this in the name of “corruption” and “democracy.” How can
anyone who is minimally rational believe this is about
“corruption” when they’re about to install as president someone
far more implicated in corruption than the person they’re removing,
and when the factions to be empowered are corrupt beyond what can be
described? And if they were really concerned with “democracy,”
why wouldn’t they also impeach Temer and hold new
elections, letting
voters decide who should replace Dilma?
The answer is obvious: New elections would almost certainly result in
a victory for
Lula or other candidates they dislike,
so what they fear most is letting the Brazilian population decide who
will govern them. That is
the very definition of the destruction of democracy.
Beyond
obvious global significance, the reason I’ve spent so much time and
energy writing about these events is because it’s been
astonishing — and unnerving — to watch it all unfold,
particularly given how the country’s dominant media, owned by a
tiny handful of rich families, allow almost no plurality of opinion.
Instead, as Reporters Without Borders put
it earlier this month:
“In a barely veiled manner, the leading national media have urged
the public to help bring down President Dilma Rousseff. The
journalists working for these media groups are clearly subject to the
influence of private and partisan interests, and these permanent
conflicts of interests are clearly very detrimental to the quality of
their reporting.”
As
someone who has lived in Brazil for 11 years, it’s been
inspiring and invigorating to watch a country of 200 million people
throw off the shackles of a 21-year-old right-wing (U.S./U.K.
supported) military dictatorship and mature into a young,
vibrant democracy and then thrive under it. To see how
quickly and easily that can be reversed — abolished in all but
name only — is both sad and frightening to watch. It’s
also an important lesson for those, in countries all over the world,
who blithely assume that things will continue as is or that they’re
guaranteed stability and ongoing progress.
Last
week, I spoke to Democracy
Now for
about 10 minutes on why I think these developments in Brazil are so
significant:
Glenn Greenwald was interviewed on CNN
See who the new Foreign Minister is!
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