Brazilian Prosecutor Finds No Crime Committed by Dilma: Will the Law Count for Anything in Brazil?
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Brazilian Prosecutor Finds No Crime Committed by Dilma: Will the Law Count for Anything in Brazil?
Written by Mark Weisbrot Published: 19 July 2016
An immense effort was made to remove Bill Clinton from the presidency in the late 1990s, culminating in the first impeachment trial of a US president in 131 years. Intimate details of his affair with Monica Lewinsky, about which Clinton was accused of lying under oath, were probed and published by the far-right prosecutor Ken Starr. This let loose a flood of jokes and salacious fodder for the tabloids. At one point it seemed as if the question of perjury might hinge on what constitutes sexual relations; whereupon the editor of the Journal of the American Medical Association decided to publish an article based on survey data showing that 59 percent of college students did not consider oral sex as having had sex. He was promptly fired, after 17 years at the helm of the prestigious medical journal although some maintained that his overseers were taking advantage of the political situation to get rid of someone who had also published articles favoring universal, single payer health care and other things not dear to the hearts of the AMA.
The current attempt to remove President Dilma Rousseff of Brazil bears many resemblances to the Clinton impeachment episode. It is led by a group of politicians who seek to overturn the results of national elections and steer the nation in a different, right-wing direction; and the elected president has not committed an impeachable offense. Missing, of course, is the sex scandal and the charges are so unsexy that most people dont even know what the president is being impeached for, and its not that easy to figure it out.
Most importantly, a crime is missing; even Bill Clintons enemies could at least come up with the alleged crimes of perjury and obstruction of justice. But Dilma Rousseffs impeachers have no such criminal violation to even allege. This was the conclusion last week of the federal prosecutor, Ivan Claudio Marx, who was assigned to investigate the offenses for which Dilma is about to stand trial in Brazils Senate. He determined that Dilma did not break the law in her handling of the public budget. The impeachment centers around her decision to delay payments to the state banks, which allowed the government to maintain the appearance of staying within a targeted fiscal balance in its accounts. Marx determined that this was not a crime, because it was not a credit transaction that would require congressional approval.
In a society where the rule of law is in effect, that would spell the end of the effort to remove the elected president. But press reports inasmuch as they even bothered to report on the prosecutors conclusion seem to indicate that pro-impeachment forces are acting as though the law, and the prosecutors statement, are irrelevant. They are pressing full steam ahead for the Senate to reverse the results of the October 2014 presidential elections. And as we now know from leaked transcripts of phone conversations, some of the leaders are doing it to prevent further investigation of their own alleged corruption.
More:
http://cepr.net/blogs/the-world-in-transition/brazilian-prosecutor-finds-no-crime-committed-by-dilma-will-the-law-count-for-anything-in-brazil
MADem
(135,425 posts)is supposed to go right back to work.
forest444
(5,902 posts)Unfortunately, even a casual glance at the history of the Latin American right-wing shows that, to them, the constitution is written in pencil.
She and her allies are lucky they've let them live. They might have in fact already been mowed down were it not for international media scrutiny (except the Whore Street Journal, of course, which would be all for it).
Igel
(35,293 posts)But she did say that what was done had as its goal to whitewash the public accounts, which amounts to administrative misconduct, a "civil offense." http://www.jb.com.br/pais/noticias/2016/07/14/pedaladas-do-governo-dilma-nao-sao-crime-diz-ministerio-publico/
Don't know the difference in Brazilian law between a criminal and a civil offense, but you think that would be mentioned in this article since it's certainly going to be relevant. (I expect to find that people without googling will be sure to tell me all the details. My Portuguese is adequate for newspapers, but not legal sites.)