Published on Portside (https://portside.org)
In Brazil,
New Corruption Scandals For Faction that Impeached Dilma
Glenn Greenwald
Friday, November 25, 2016
The Intercept
A PRIMARY
ARGUMENT MADE by opponents of impeaching Brazilian president Dilma
Rousseff was that removing her would immediately empower the truly corrupt politicians in
Brasília [1] – the ones who were the driving force behind her impeachment
– and they would then use that power to kill ongoing corruption investigations
and shield themselves from consequences for their own law-breaking. In that
regard, Dilma’s impeachment was not designed to punish corruption but to
protect it. The last two weeks have produced new corruption scandals that have
vindicated that view beyond what even its proponents imagined was possible.
In his
short time in office, Temer has already lost five ministers to scandal, but
these new controversies are the most serious yet. One major scandal involves an
effort in Congress – led by the very parties that impeached Dilma, with the
support of some in Dilma’s party – to pass a law that vests themselves full
legal amnesty for their crimes involving election financing. In late September,
a bill appeared in Congress, seemingly out of nowhere, that would have
retroactively protected any member of Congress from being punished for the use
of so-called “caixa dois” (second box) monies in campaigns, whereby politicians
receive under-the-table contributions from oligarchs and corporations that they
do not declare.
Many of
Brazil’s most powerful politicians – including its Foreign Minister, a majority
of members of the lower House, and installed President Michel Temer himself
(pictured above) – are implicated in this scheme and are thus threatened with
the possibility of prosecution. “Caixa dois” has been a key tactic used to
bribe politicians. The issue has taken on particular urgency because the
imprisoned billionaire CEO of the nation’s construction giant Odebrecht,
Marcelo Odebrecht, is about to finalize his plea agreement, and it will
identify numerous key figures as having received millions of dollars in such
undeclared donations.
It has
already been reported that Temer’s Foreign Minister, José Serra, received R$ 23 million ($7 million) in such illegal funds [2] from
Odebrecht, much of which was deposited into a Swiss Bank account to avoid
detection (those funds were for his losing 2010 presidential campaign against
Dilma, showing how those who lost democratically and are mired in serious
corruption are the ones who have now seized power due to Dilma’s impeachment).
When this
amnesty bill first appeared in September, it was done in such a way to prevent
anyone from noticing, or finding out who was responsible. At the time, The Intercept Brasil described it [3] as a
move that “shocked even the most longtime, jaded observers of corrupt Brasília
plotting.” That effort failed when two left-wing parties, PSOL and Rede, blew
the whistle and impeded parliamentary efforts that would have enabled quick
enactment (as disclosure: my husband, David Miranda, was elected to Rio’s City
Council last month on a PSOL ticket). But as we ended our September article by
noting: “Convinced of their own entitlement and ability to act without consequence,
there is no doubt they will try again to lavish themselves with amnesty while
nobody is looking.”
That time
is now, except that they are doing it out in the open. Because virtually every
party has major figures implicated by this illegal campaign scheme, most
parties are openly united in support of this amnesty, on the theory that if
they all act together, it won’t be pinned on any one of them and nobody can be
politically punished (while most large parties are overwhelmingly behind it,
PT’s delegation is split almost evenly on it, and the same two left-wing
parties that impeded it the first time are fully opposed).
But the
dominant group in the Congress is the one that led the impeachment battle and
is now loyal to Temer, and they – composed of a huge number of members
endangered by this “caixa dois” lawbreaking – can ensure that this amnesty will
pass. Temer himself has signaled that he will not veto it, and his party, PMDB,
is largely supportive of it. The vote was scheduled for last week but, as public
pressure mounted, the vote was delayed to this coming Tuesday.
The judge
leading the corruption investigation, Sérgio Moro, warned this week that this
amnesty bill could seriously impede his investigation – which is, of course,
its central purpose. He warned more generally that retroactive amnesty measures
that benefit the politicians who enact them are exactly the sort of thing that
has destroyed faith in Brazil’s political institutions.
So here we
have the very same people who impeached the democratically elected president in
the name of punishing corruption and upholding the rule of law, using their
ill-gotten power to shield themselves from accountability for their own
political crimes. From the start, this was the fraud at the heart of Dilma’s
impeachment, and it is hard to put into words how clear and obvious it has now
become. Even the star columnist for O Globo – the newspaper that most agitated
for impeachment – is now admitting that the central anti-impeachment argument
is being proven correct, tweeting yesterday: [4] “Approval
of caixa dois amnesty reinforces PT’s argument that Dilma was removed so that
the Lava Jato corruption investigation could be stymied.”
That this
was the true goal of impeachment all along was beyond obvious. In May, one of
Temer’s closest allies, Romero Jucá, was forced to resign as Temer’s minister
after tapes were disclosed in which Jucá admitted [5] as
clearly as possible that Dilma’s impeachment was necessary in order to kill the
corruption investigation, and that only once Dilma was gone would the media,
the courts, the military and the public enter into a “national pact” to leave
Brasília’s corrupt politicians alone.
But while
Jucá was forced by the fallout to resign as minister in May, he was just named
this month as leader of the Temer government in the Senate – because,
obviously, Jucá’s corrupt scheme is shared by Temer and those who now rule
Brazil. So Brazil’s big media outlets are only now being forced to admit what
was completely clear all along: that by demanding impeachment, they were
empowering Brazil’s most corrupt politicians and ensuring that the corruption
investigation would be impeded.
BUT NOW AN
ENTIRELY NEW SCANDAL directly threatens Temer himself. Last week, Temer’s
Minister of Culture, Marcelo Calero, flamboyantly resigned [6],
announcing he was doing so because one of Temer’s closest allies, the Minster
of Government Geddel Vieira Lima, had been aggressively pressuring Calero to
take action to benefit a construction project in which Geddel had a personal
interest. Specifically, Geddel pressured Calero to secure approval for
construction of a luxury high-rise in a historic beachfront preservation area,
a building in which Geddel had purchased an apartment.
At first,
Temer defended Geddel, adamantly insisting that he would not be fired. Temer’s
appointee on a Congressional Ethics Committee blocked a vote to investigate
whether Geddel violated ethical rules. Temer sought to downplay the controversy
in every way possible in order to protect his close ally.
But that
has now become impossible. Yesterday, Calero, the
minister-turned-whistleblower, gave a sworn statement to the Federal Police in
which he said that not only was he pressured by Geddel to secure approval for
this construction project, but that Temer himself spoke with him on two
occasions and similarly pressured him. As a result, the front page of every major newspaper this morning has screaming headlines [7] that
Temer himself is now implicated in this scandal, and opposition parties have
already instituted impeachment proceedings against Temer himself for this.
(Geddel resigned just this morning [8] as
this article was being published: the sixth minister Temer has lost to scandal [9].)
All of this
comes as the leading figures in Temer’s party, the centrist PMDB, are not just
engulfed by political scandal but are going to prison. The House Speaker who
presided over and was the driving force behind Dilma’s impeachment, Eduardo
Cunha, is now in prison as he awaits trial [10] on
charges of money laundering and bribery after being discovered with millions
hidden away in Swiss bank accounts, while the former Governor of Rio de Janeiro
state, Sérgio Cabral, last week was arrested [11] on
charges of overseeing a massive corruption scheme. This has always been one of
the towering ironies of Dilma’s impeachment: that the party most empowered by
it, Temer’s PMDB (formerly in alliance with PT), not only single-handedly destroyed Rio de Janeiro [11] through
ineptitude and corruption, but is filled with the continent’s most blatantly
criminal political leaders.
IN SOME
WAYS, to Brazil’s oligarchical class, served (as always) by its media,
it does not much matter what happens to Temer. Like Cunha before him, Temer has
served his purpose: he just oversaw passage of a radical austerity measure [12] that
– in the face of Brazil’s negative growth – literally amended the Constitution
to bar spending increases beyond the rate of inflation for 20 years. Since
entering office, he has overseen an orgy of privatization, austerity and
spending freezes that Brazil’s oligarchical class has long craved. And, most of
all, he was the tool used to remove Dilma.
Recall that
Temer himself, when speaking in New York in September to foreign investors and
foreign policy elites, admitted that Dilma’s impeachment was due in large part
to her refusal to accept his party’s austerity program, a stunning
admission which Brazil’s big media completely ignored [13]. Whether
he is impeached in favor of new elections or is permitted to stumble through
the remainder of his term as a widely despised figure matters little to them.
They got what they wanted.
Nonetheless,
the true purpose of impeachment now stands so nakedly revealed that even the
prime media authors of impeachment are being forced to acknowledge what, until
very recently, they viciously mocked [14]: that the
real purpose was to protect and empower the corrupt. But as vindicated as they
now are, impeachment opponents can feel no sense of celebration, as these
latest events simply yet again mean that the Brazilian people will continue to
suffer greatly from a political and elite class that has failed them through
the most glaring deceit and oozing corruption imaginable. The greatest fraud of
all was that Dilma’s impeachment was sold to the population as a means of
ridding the country of mismanagement and corruption when, from the start, it
was designed to do exactly the opposite.
Glenn
Greenwald is one of three co-founding editors of The Intercept. He is a
journalist, constitutional lawyer, and author of four New York Times
best-selling books on politics and law. Along with Laura Poitras, Foreign Policy
magazine named him one of the top 100 Global Thinkers for 2013. The National
Security Agency (NSA) reporting he led for The Guardian was awarded the 2014
Pulitzer Prize for public service. He can be reached at glenn.greenwald@
theintercept.com [15] or
via Twitter @ggreenwald [16].
Links:
[1] https://www.democracynow.org/2016/5/10/glenn_greenwald_on_brazil_goal_of
[2] http://www1.folha.uol.com.br/internacional/en/brazil/2016/08/1800287-jose-serra-currently-minister-of-foreign-relations-received-r23-million-off-the-books-claims-odebrecht.shtml
[3] https://theintercept.com/2016/09/20/brazil-congress-sneak-grab-at-self-amnesty-shows-the-deep-corruption-of-its-new-ruling-faction/
[4] https://twitter.com/BlogdoNoblat/status/801816128850980868
[5] https://theintercept.com/2016/05/23/new-political-earthquake-in-brazil-is-it-now-time-for-media-outlets-to-call-this-a-coup/
[6] http://www.reuters.com/article/us-brazil-corruption-idUSKBN13G26L
[7] https://twitter.com/GeorgMarques/status/802091848453996546
[8] http://g1.globo.com/politica/noticia/2016/11/geddel-pede-temer-demissao-da-secretaria-de-governo-diz-planalto.html
[9] http://g1.globo.com/politica/noticia/2016/11/geddel-e-o-sexto-ministro-de-temer-deixar-o-governo-veja-lista.html
[10] http://www.nytimes.com/2016/10/20/world/americas/brazil-eduardo-cunha.html
[11] http://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/18/world/americas/sergio-cabral-rio-governor-corruption.html
[12] http://agenciabrasil.ebc.com.br/en/economia/noticia/2016-10/brazil-lower-house-approves-20-year-government-spending-cap
[13] https://theintercept.com/2016/09/23/brazils-big-media-ignores-temers-confession-except-estadao-columnist-who-falsely-claimed-video-was-altered/
[14] https://twitter.com/asfgthjkkll/status/801861081098547200
[15] http://glenn.greenwald@theintercept.com
[16] https://twitter.com/@ggreenwald
[2] http://www1.folha.uol.com.br/internacional/en/brazil/2016/08/1800287-jose-serra-currently-minister-of-foreign-relations-received-r23-million-off-the-books-claims-odebrecht.shtml
[3] https://theintercept.com/2016/09/20/brazil-congress-sneak-grab-at-self-amnesty-shows-the-deep-corruption-of-its-new-ruling-faction/
[4] https://twitter.com/BlogdoNoblat/status/801816128850980868
[5] https://theintercept.com/2016/05/23/new-political-earthquake-in-brazil-is-it-now-time-for-media-outlets-to-call-this-a-coup/
[6] http://www.reuters.com/article/us-brazil-corruption-idUSKBN13G26L
[7] https://twitter.com/GeorgMarques/status/802091848453996546
[8] http://g1.globo.com/politica/noticia/2016/11/geddel-pede-temer-demissao-da-secretaria-de-governo-diz-planalto.html
[9] http://g1.globo.com/politica/noticia/2016/11/geddel-e-o-sexto-ministro-de-temer-deixar-o-governo-veja-lista.html
[10] http://www.nytimes.com/2016/10/20/world/americas/brazil-eduardo-cunha.html
[11] http://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/18/world/americas/sergio-cabral-rio-governor-corruption.html
[12] http://agenciabrasil.ebc.com.br/en/economia/noticia/2016-10/brazil-lower-house-approves-20-year-government-spending-cap
[13] https://theintercept.com/2016/09/23/brazils-big-media-ignores-temers-confession-except-estadao-columnist-who-falsely-claimed-video-was-altered/
[14] https://twitter.com/asfgthjkkll/status/801861081098547200
[15] http://glenn.greenwald@theintercept.com
[16] https://twitter.com/@ggreenwald
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"The master class
has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles.
The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject
class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives."
Eugene Victor Debs
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