Brazil's president struggles to retain power as political crisis deepens
Michel
Temer is refusing to resign and has said he will fight accusations of
involvement in passive corruption, as protests lead to scuffles with
police
Protesters
clash with police during the protest in Brasilia on Wednesday.
Photograph: Evaristo Sa/AFP/Getty Images
Associated
Press in Brasilia
Wednesday
24 May 2017 19.37 BSTLast modified on Wednesday 24 May
2017 19.57 BST
Thousands
of protesters have called for Brazil’s president, Michel
Temer,to
leave office as he lost yet another key adviser amid a deepening
political crisis.
Brazil: explosive recordings implicate President Michel Temer in bribery
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Scuffles
between police and protesters broke out as the demonstrations neared
Congress.
Temer
is struggling to retain power after the release of a recording that
appears to capture him approving hush money for a convicted former
lawmaker. The president is resisting calls to resign and has said he
will fight the accusations. Brazil’s top court is investigating him
for alleged obstruction of justice and involvement in passive
corruption.
Even
before the scandal broke, Temer’s popularity was low, in part
because of opposition to economic reforms he is trying to push
through Congress. Several
of his allies and aides have also been caught up in a wide-ranging
corruption investigation that
has jailed business leaders and senior politicians.
Only
one of the five special aides to the president now remains following
the resignation Wednesday of former lawmaker Sandro Mabel, one of
three who had been linked to corruption allegations. Mabel published
a letter saying he needs to spend more time with his family.
In
Brasilia, the capital, thousands of protesters marched toward
Congress in an effort to stop proposed reforms to the country’s
retirement system that unions and others say will force Brazilians to
work too many hours and will unfairly reduce pensions. Temer says
those and other reforms are necessary to drag the economy out of a
deep recession.
But
protesters also took aim at the president himself, shouting “Out
with Temer!” and carrying signs calling for immediate direct
presidential elections.
If
Temer resigns, the Constitution says that Congress would vote to
elect the next president, who would hold power through the end of
2018. But many Brazilians, disgusted with the political class, want
to vote themselves.
The Guardian view on Brazilian corruption: the public deserve a voice
Editorial: The
explosive allegations faced by Brazil’s president Michel Temer are
just the latest manifestation of a sprawling scandal. A quick
political fix will not solve the problems
Read
more
While
the demonstration was initially peaceful, police and protesters began
clashing as the protest neared Congress. Police in riot gear, some on
foot holding shields and others on horseback, lined up near the
chamber. In television images, police could be seen spraying tear gas
or pepper spray at protesters and detaining others who tried to break
through a cordon.
In
Rio de Janeiro, demonstrators gathered in front of the state assembly
to protest proposed austerity measures.
“The
state today is in a sea of debt because of corruption,” said Julio
Cesar Azevedo, a leader of a union that represents prison guards.
“It’s not right that public servants are paying this bill.”
The
state of Rio is in serious financial trouble and many public servants
have received their salaries late or not at all.
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