Fausta's Blog

American and Latin American Politics, Society, and Culture

June 15, 2016 By Fausta

Brazil: No immunity for Lula

Dilma had even named him her new chief of staff, so he wouldn’t be prosecuted. So much for that:
Brazil High Court Strips Ex-President Lula da Silva of Privileged Standing. Former leader’s corruption case is referred back to crusading judge Sergio Moro

The decision late Monday by Justice Teori Zavascki effectively strips Mr. da Silva of privileged legal protection reserved for high-ranking officials. The move increases the likelihood that Mr. da Silva, still Brazil’s most towering political figure, could be arrested in connection with a blockbuster corruption probe centered on state oil firm Petróleo Brasileiro SA or Petrobras.

Since judge Zavascki determined that Lula is no longer a sitting politician, he can be investigated by judge Moro’s court.

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Filed Under: Brazil, corruption, Lula Tagged With: Dilma Rousseff, Fausta's blog

May 14, 2016 By Fausta

Venezuela: Coup rumors increase

Things are getting interesting in South America.

In Brazil, Dilma Rousseff was suspended from office as the Senate voted to start her impeachment trial

on charges that she illegally moved money between state-controlled entities to make her government’s budget deficit appear smaller than it really was

The following day in Argentina, former President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner and other officials were indicted on charges of manipulating the nation’s Central Bank during the final months of her administration.

Then last night rumors of a coup popped up on Twitter regarding Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro, after he declared a three-month state of emergency “to neutralize and defeat foreign aggression,” i.e., he thinks the U.S. is trying to overthrow him,

Maduro said the measures will likely last through 2017, but he did not specify if they will limit civil rights.The announcement, made with his full cabinet at his side, broadens the scope of an economic emergency decree in effect since January that was set to expire on Saturday.

Venezuela is in chaos. The country is broke, the oil industry – on which the country depends for 95% of its revenues – is in shambles, and tourism is dead,

Cruise lines won’t dock in #Margarita Island, #Venezuela. Port no longer “meets minimum standards” https://t.co/EcUktBLT4r

— Joel D. Hirst (@joelhirst) May 14, 2016

The headlines are horrific,
Growing Venezuela lynch mobs burn thieves alive.
Raw Venezuela: Looter Burned Alive, While “Streets Filled With People Killing Animals For Food”.
Add to that the food shortages, power outages, and medical crisis I’ve been posting about for years. And you can forget about the Chinese bullet train.

Not surprisingly, rumors of a coup are on the increase.

Joshua Goldman reports,

U.S. intelligence analysts are increasingly convinced that Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro is likely to be pushed aside by members of his own socialist movement before finishing his term.

Juan Forero explains,

The officials, who have extensive experience in the region, said that they and others in the intelligence community increasingly believe that President Nicolás Maduro could be removed from office, either in a “palace coup” led by associates close to him or in a military uprising. They said that the possibility of an overthrow or street violence is of concern to American officials, who want to avoid anarchy in an oil-rich country just a three-hour flight from Miami.

Daniel looks at the timing in the context of Mercosur: Daniel speculates that removing Maduro from office may be an option by the Cuban-controlled military as a means to avoid full pariah status for the country, now that Brazil’s new president, Michel Temer, may not want to countenance Maduro’s regime (and Temer may bring powerful allies to his side),

If Brazil goes against Venezuela it is likely that Uruguay will follow and Mercosur will be unanimous in its condemnation. Once Peru election is held in June even Unasur would go against Venezuela (and the recent hurried support to Dilma by Unasur secretary, the highly discredited puppet Samper, betray that worry).Thus the time for Castro to give the order to Maduro, and/or the narco-military to take the initiative to dissolve the national assembly once and for all is now. It is still possible that the OAS could fail to get enough votes to apply the democratic charter to Venezuela after Maduro acts. But once Temer decides to act against Venezuela, with the support of Macri in Argentina, the US and Canada, Mexico would follow. Small countries then will chose the big countries against a flat broke violent Venezuela and game over: Venezuela would be a pariah state and go the way of Cuba out of regional organizations.

But with the narco-military still in charge. Or that is the plan anyway.

And thus it is the time to act for them, the thugs, now, before Temer even has a chance to look at Venezuela. All that has been going on since last Monday points that way.

What Daniel means re: the OAS applying the democratic charter is that, were the OAS to declare that Venezuela had violated it, the country would be expelled from the OAS [See OAS Democratic Charter], which would mean pariah status for the country that Hugo Chávez envisioned leading the Hemisphere. (UPDATE: See note* below). What kinds of accommodations would the new narco-military “administration” be willing to make to avoid expulsion from the OAS leads you into the realm of pure speculation.

Participants at this week’s Concordia Summit in Miami, Spain’s José María Aznar, Colombia’s Álvaro Uribe and Andrés Pastrana, Chile’s Sebastián Piñera, Uruguay’s Luis Alberto Lacalle, and Bolivia’s Jorge Fernando Quiroga, discussed the failure of 21st Century Socialism in Latin America.

As Álvaro Uribe said on Thursday night, “Chávez died without having to experience the tragedy of his legacy.”

Related:
Fifty ways to say ‘debacle’.

*UPDATE NOTE:
Replacing Maduro is no simple task. Last month I mentioned several factors,

Maduro’s term ends next year. Why should the government hurry?
Cuba is getting new funds from the US, and is in no hurry to pressure Venezuela to improve.
The other actors in the region (drug cartels, FARC, Iran) have no incentive to precipitate a risky change.
The purpose of the regime is to consolidate power around itself, not to act in the benefit of the country.

So a replacement would have to be agreeable to the Cuban-controlled military, the Cartel de los Soles, others in the power elite, the FARC, and the Iranians, while being passable enough to the OAS to prevent the country’s expulsion.

And a military junta is not an attractive option, either.

UPDATE:
Linked to by the Pirate’s Cove. Thank you!

Linked to by the Daily Gator. Thank you!

Trending at BadBlue.

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Filed Under: Argentina, Brazil, Fausta's blog, Venezuela Tagged With: Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, Dilma Rousseff, Fausta's blog, Mercosur, Nicolas Maduro

May 12, 2016 By Fausta

Brazil: Senate votes to try Dilma for impeachment

  • Senate voted 55 to 22 in favor of holding the trial
  • Dilma suspended for 180 days
  • Michel Temer, the vice-president will replace her
  • Senate voting session started yesterday and lasted through the night
  • Dilma’s the 2d president to be tried for impeachment since democracy was restored in 1985. In 1992, then-President Fernando Collar Collor de Mello resigned after he was put on trial by the Senate on corruption charges.
  • #TachauQuerida trending
  • Dilma’s most recent approval ratings at 10%
  • Brazil is Latin America’s largest economy

SAY GOODBYE
#TchauQuerida #QuintaClubeSDV #impeachmentbrazil pic.twitter.com/ncZuSCXNKW

— snap: caiosnom (@caiosnunes) May 12, 2016

At the WSJ:
Brazil Senate Votes in Favor of Dilma Rousseff Impeachment Trial. President will have to step down until trial ends; vice president will assume her post

Ms. Rousseff is being tried on charges that she illegally moved money between state-controlled entities to make her government’s budget deficit appear smaller than it really was. She denies wrongdoing and accuses her opponents of effectively staging a coup d’état.

Michel Temer is ready to take office. His party, the [Brazilian Democratic Movement Party] PMDB promotes (my translation),

labor and social security reforms, smaller government, reducing the interventionism that marked the PT’s administrations [under Lula and Dilma], and stimulating the private sector’s participation, especially in infrastructure.

The economy is in free fall: Brazil’s Economic Rise and Fall in Charts Underlines Temer’s Tough Task

Mr. Temer’s success or failure will depend on his ability to overcome three major crises—corruption, political dysfunction and Brazil’s worst recession in generations—that are deeply interconnected. Temer would permanently assume the presidency only if the Senate trial ends on a guilty verdict (see this post).

Related:
Lava-Jato

Memeorandum thread.



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Filed Under: Brazil, Fausta's blog Tagged With: Dilma Rousseff, Fausta's blog, Lava Jato, Michel Temer

May 10, 2016 By Fausta

Brazil: The impeachment samba

There’s a new dance in Brazil: Impeachment Samba!

No, not this kind,

This kind:

Brazil Lower House President Reverses Decision to Annul Rousseff Impeachment. Process to put president on trial now likely to begin this week as previously expected

The acting president of Brazil’s lower house reversed on Tuesday his decision to annul the impeachment process against President Dilma Rousseff, which is now likely to take place later this week as previously expected.

In a short statement, Waldir Maranhão, the acting president of the Chamber of Deputies, provided no reason to suspend his earlier decision to annul the process.

Mr. Maranhão, in a surprise step on Monday, moved to annul the lower house’s April 17 decision to send the impeachment process to the Senate for a possible trial, alleging that many deputies had announced their decisions ahead of time, depriving Ms. Rousseff of a fair hearing.

An hour later, Renan Calheiros, the president of Brazil’s Senate, dismissed Mr. Maranhão’s action and said that the Senate would hold its vote as scheduled later this week, possibly leading to Ms. Rousseff’s suspension

In brief: The Chamber of Deputies supported impeachment on April 17. Yesterday its acting president reversed it. An hour later  the president of the Senate said they’ll vote on impeachment anyway.

The stock market yo-yos right along, in keeping with the samba.

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Filed Under: Brazil Tagged With: Dilma Rousseff, Fausta's blog

April 18, 2016 By Fausta

Brazil: #TchauQuerida. Dilma on the road to impeachment

Bye-bye Dilma 👋🏻
Aproveita e leva o Lula junto ☺️#tchaudilma pic.twitter.com/CoWsQhji5F

— W.Kiyota Taemi (@KiyotaW) April 18, 2016

[Bye-bye Dilma.
And take Lula with y ou while you’re at it. #tchaudilma]

Yesterday’s #1 TV show in Brazil? Brazil Lower House Votes to Impeach President Dilma Rousseff. Senate will next vote on whether to pursue an impeachment trial

The Chamber of Deputies voted 367-137, with seven abstentions and two no-shows, topping the necessary threshold of 342 votes to move the impeachment proceedings to the Senate. The upper house will now decide in coming days whether she should stand trial for allegedly violating Brazil’s budget laws.

Sunday’s vote marks a major step toward removing Ms. Rousseff from power. The odds are against her prevailing in the Senate, which isn’t likely to save a badly weakened president, said Carlos Melo, a political-science professor at the Insper business school in São Paulo.

The Twitter tags followed, with #TchaoQuerida and #TchauQuerida (Bye, darling) among the favorites.

O Globo has full coverage (my translation)

If the majority of the senators decide to open the impeachment process, Dilma will be removed from office immediately for up to 180 days, while the House examines whether there is evidence to permanently revoke her.

ROUNDUP:
#Brasil Paliza al Foro de San Pablo: Diputados aprueban destitución de Rousseff

At Memeorandum,

Andrew Jacobs / New York Times:

Dilma Rousseff Is Impeached by Brazil’s Lower House of Congress  —  BRASÍLIA — Brazilian legislators voted on Sunday night to approve impeachment of Dilma Rousseff, the nation’s first female president, whose tenure has been buffeted by a dizzying corruption scandal, a shrinking economy and spreading disillusionment.
RELATED:

Jonathan Watts / Guardian: Brazilian congress votes to impeach president Dilma Rousseff

Discussion: Bloomberg, New York Magazine, Los Angeles Times and The Atlantic

Brazil’s Congress approves process to impeach President Dilma Rousseff. Embattled leader’s future now lies in the hands of the Senate

If you’re unsure why President Rousseff’s impeachment vote matters in Brazil, here’s a guide https://t.co/BNTfBDGKeJ pic.twitter.com/ywOmfGtS5e

— Bloomberg (@business) April 18, 2016


Brazil crisis: Rousseff loses lower house impeachment vote


(click on image for larger view)

Dilma’s approval rating is 10 percent. O Globo estimates that 50 senators would vote for impeachment.

The question is, who next?

Rousseff and her supporters have pointed out that her potential successors and many opposition lawmakers are facing corruption charges or allegations in the Petrobras scandal. Members of the vice president’s party are allegedly “deeply involved” in the scandal, according to the Financial Times. Cunha, second in line to replace Rousseff, was charged with money laundering and corruption last year for allegedly accepting a $5 million bribe. Renan Calheiros, the president of the Senate and third in line to the presidency, has been implicated in the scheme in testimony from a Workers Party politician who was charged in the investigation. More than half of the members of the congressional impeachment committee areunder investigation for corruption or other serious crimes.

As I said earlier, what Brazil’s institutions and people do will determine the fate of their country – and possibly of the hemisphere – for the remaining of the 21st century.

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Filed Under: Brazil, Fausta's blog Tagged With: Dilma Rousseff, Fausta's blog, impeachment

April 15, 2016 By Fausta

Brazil: Supreme Court OKs impeachment process to start

Dilma had requested that they suspend it, but Brazil Supreme Court Allows Presidential Impeachment Process to Proceed (emphasis added),

A majority of Supreme Court justices voted against a petition by Solicitor General José Eduardo Cardozo alleging that a special panel considered prejudicial evidence that was unrelated to the main accusations against her.

Mr. Cardozo noted that members of the special impeachment committee in the lower house of Brazil’s Congress heard testimony about a corruption scandal at state oil company Petróleo Brasileiro SA, or Petrobras, when they voted on Monday on a report recommending Ms. Rousseff’s removal from office.

The Petrobras testimony, Mr. Cardozo argued, had nothing to do with the allegations of accounting tricks that form the basis for the impeachment proceedings against Ms. Rousseff.

Brazil’s full Chamber of Deputies is scheduled to vote Sunday on whether to move the impeachment process forward to Brazil’s Senate.

The impeachment proceedings against Ms. Rousseff are based on allegations she violated federal budget laws by using loans from state-owned banks to mask the size of the government’s budget deficit. Ms. Rousseff has denied any wrongdoing.

Apparently some 2/3 of the members of the Chamber of Deputies favor impeachment at this point. We’ll see how they vote on Sunday.

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Filed Under: Brazil Tagged With: Dilma Rousseff, Fausta's blog

April 4, 2016 By Fausta

Brazil: Dilma’s crisis

Mary O’Grady weighs in on Brazil,
Brazil’s Middle-Class RevoltThe effort to impeach President Dilma Rousseff is a sign of a maturing democracy. (emphasis added)

Brazil’s economic outlook is grim, and the recent discoveries of rampant corruption are demoralizing. But it can take a crisis to bring about reform, and the nonviolent, popular pushback is notable. The call to impeach is a sign of a maturing democracy in which civil society is confident enough to rise up against the political class.

This vitality is aided by three relatively recent developments: the end of hyperinflation, the exchange of ideas and information on social media, and the ability and willingness of prosecutors to use plea bargains to investigate organized crime.

As I have mentioned, what Brazil’s institutions and people do will determine the fate of their country – and possibly of the hemisphere – for the remaining of the 21st century.

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Filed Under: Brazil Tagged With: Dilma Rousseff, Fausta' blog

March 28, 2016 By Fausta

The Rolling Stones Carnival of Latin America and the Caribbean

The weekend’s top story: Lots of dollars, and fifty years late, the Cuban communist regime finally allowed the now septuagenarians Stones to play in the island-prison, while still persecuting the local rockers. As expected, it was largely attended by foreigners who could cough up the admission price.

ARGENTINA
Can Mauricio Macri Save Argentina’s Economy? With Obama’s trip offering new access to international markets, Argentina’s new president will have to be tough to survive the bold reforms he seeks.

Macri’s macroeconomic challenges are vast, however, and success will depend on his administration’s ability to curb a 5.4 percent GDP budget deficit (the biggest since 1982), temper soaring inflation (current annual levels are about 36 percent), and stimulate economic growth. But necessary fiscal and monetary tightening could actually hurt economic improvement in the near term, risking the government’s ability to pay for the costs of implementing longer-term reforms. Already, Argentina’s economy is set to contract 1 percent this year.

Crying in Argentina update: false number of “dictatorship” victims exposed

Nisman Case to Be Investigated as Political Murder, Argentine Court Rules

Nobody promotes freedom abroad like Obama! ‘Decide what works’ between communism, socialism or capitalism and go with it Also at Gay Patriot.

OBAMA ON FREEDOM VS. TOTALITARIANISM — WHATEVER WORKS

Video of the whole speech (41:00 for capitalism vs, communism),

Barack Obama is to tango what Yogi Berra was to water polo.

BOLIVIA
Bolivian State Threatens to Close Down over 500 Radio Stations. Decree by President Morales Hinders Renewal of Licenses

Gabriela Zapata es presa política, dice su abogado. ICYMI: Bolivia Arrests President’s Former Mistress

BRAZIL
Brazil Economic Woes Deepen Amid Political Crisis. Country is heading for one of its worst recessions ever, yet its political straits draw all the attention

Brazil’s Rousseff slams ‘fascist’ attempts to oust her. Brazilian president says in newspaper interview her removal would be a coup

CHILE
Harvest time begins at Latin America’s largest marijuana farm. The pioneering plantation in southern Chile produces about 1.5 tons a year for medical use

Chile’s Future: On the World Stage. What can Chile’s Santiago a Mil festival tell us about the country?

COLOMBIA
“Army searches for explosives buried by the FARC in the areas surrounding schools in Baraya, Huila. More information at 12:30PM”

Buscan explosivos sembrados por las Farc en alrededores de escuelas en Baraya, Huila. Más información a las 12:30pm.https://t.co/ZLH6pD43Tl

— Noticias RCN (@NoticiasRCN) March 24, 2016

CUBA
Dissidents’ Delight? New York Times Heaps Praise on Obama, Its Man in Havana

ABC’s Muir Wonders to Obama: Does Castro ‘Have a Point’ Criticizing U.S. for No Universal Healthcare?

ECUADOR
Ecuador Plans to Hike Taxes on Cigarettes, Alcohol and Soft Drinks

GUATEMALA
Guatemala’s CICIG: An Experiment in Motion Gets a Report Card. Two recent reports on Guatemala’s CICIG illustrate the international’s body’s potential to affect powerful shifts in the status quo, as well as its broad limitations.

HONDURAS
Residents Flee Honduran Capital Neighborhood after Gang Threats

MEXICO
How Mexico Awarded $30 Million to Juárez Cartel Operator. A former executive of the Bank of Mexico received government contracts worth over $30 million despite his conviction years earlier of being a financial operator for the Juárez Cartel.

Turning the tables: Mexicans Should Reject Trump’s Populism at Home. Bravado, Victimization, Nationalism All Belong to Mexico’s Political History

Mexican ex-president posts video attacking Trump over planned wall“. Running a business does not mean having the leadership to run a nation,” Fox tells mogul. May I remind you, Under Mexican law, illegal immigration is a felony.

NICARAGUA
As Venezuela Falters, So Too Will Nicaragua

PANAMA
Panama: The Next Big Country for Latin American Films? An exponential surge in the quantity and quality of films has come out of Latin America over the past few years

PERU
Peru’s Electoral Jury Rejects Barring Presidential Candidate Keiko Fujimori

PUERTO RICO
Plan to Rescue Puerto Rico Advances, Led by House Republicans (emphasis added)

The plan, being drafted as legislation by House Republicans, would not grant Puerto Rico’s most fervent request: permission to restructure its entire $72 billion debt in bankruptcy. It would, however, give the island certain crucial tools that bankruptcy proceedings can offer — but only if it first comes under close federal oversight and meets other conditions.

VENEZUELA
Inside Venezuela’s ‘top children’s medical unit’ where patients are dying. Quality health care for everyone in Venezuela was one of the great promises of the revolution but even in the best equipped paediatric unit, there’s a shortage of drugs and medical supplies

Lying about Margarita. Sumito Estévez wants to persuade you Margarita is a swell place to vacation in 2016. In doing so, he makes himself an accomplice to an outright swindle.



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Filed Under: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Carnival of Latin America, Carnival of Latin America and the Caribbean, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, FARC, Guatemala, Honduras, Latin America, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Peru, Puerto Rico, Venezuela Tagged With: Dilma Rousseff, Fausta' blog, Gabriela Zapata, Keiko Fujimori

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