Watch:
First Interview With Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff Since the
Senate’s Impeachment Vote
Glenn Greenwald
19
May, 2016
LAST
THURSDAY, BRAZILIAN President
Dilma Rousseff was suspended from the presidency when the
Senate voted,
55-22, to try her on the impeachment charges, approved by the lower
house, involving alleged budgetary maneuvers (“pedaladas”)
designed to obscure the size of public debt. Although she nominally
remains the president and continues to reside in
BrasÃlia’s presidential palace,
her duties are being carried out by her vice president, Michel Temer
— now “interim” President Temer — and the right-wing,
corruption-tainted, all-white-male cabinet he has assembled (due to
Brazil’s coalition politics, Temer is from a different party than
Rousseff). Rousseff’s suspension will last up to 180 days as
her Senate impeachment trial takes place, at which point she
will either be acquitted or (as is widely expected) convicted and
permanently removed from her office.
On
Tuesday, I spoke to President Rousseff in the presidential palace for
her first interview since being suspended. The 22-minute interview,
conducted in Portuguese with English subtitles, is below. Rather than
subdued, resigned, and defeated, Rousseff — who was imprisoned
and tortured for three years in the 1970s by the U.S.-supported
military dictatorship that ruled the country for 21 years —
is more combative, defiant, and resolute than ever.
Since
he has taken power, Temer has exacerbated
the fears of
those who regard impeachment as an attack on democracy or even a
coup. Unlike Rousseff, he is personally implicated
in corruption scandals. He was just fined for election-law
violations and faces an eight-year ban on running for any office
(including the one into which he was just installed). Polls show only
2 percent of Brazilians would support him in an actual election,
while close to 60 percent want him impeached.
Worse,
Temer created a
worldwide controversy when
he appointed 23 ministers, all of
whom were white and male in a deeply diverse country, and one-third
of whom are under suspicion in various corruption inquiries. And his
government — beloved by hedge funds and Wall Street but very few
other factions — has begun preparing the groundwork for a
radical right-wing attack on the country’s social safety net,
which could never attract the support of actual voters if it
were subjected to a democratic framework. Meanwhile, as the Olympics
arrive in Rio in 10 weeks, protests are breaking out all over the
country and are certain to become more destabilizing and
disruptive as the Temer government attempts to cut some of the most
critical social programs established by Rousseff’s party
(which has won four straight national elections).
I
spoke with President Rousseff about all of these matters, as well as
whether it is now justified for Brazilians to use civil disobedience
against the government she describes as “illegitimate,” and the
likely impact on international affairs and economic realignment
from this extreme and undemocratic change of ideology in the world’s
fifth most populous country and seventh largest economy. (Interim
President Temer has not yet responded to The
Intercept’s request
for an interview.)
The
interview can be watched on the recorder below. A full
transcript appears below that.
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