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Rousseff nemesis vows no let-up in Brazil impeachment bid

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The controversial central figure in attempts to impeach Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff said Wednesday he will appeal a Supreme Court decision putting the brakes on the opposition's push to unseat her.

Congressional lower house speaker Eduardo Cunha told reporters his appeal would be lodged "by Friday."

A powerful politician fighting allegations that he took a $5-million bribe and hid money in Swiss bank accounts, Cunha had been expected to open impeachment proceedings against Rousseff as early as October 13.

That could have triggered a bruising battle sending Latin America's biggest country from its current mix of instability and economic paralysis into full-blown crisis.

However, the Supreme Court caused a hiccup by ruling against technicalities in Cunha's procedural plan for setting the impeachment process in motion.

This gave Rousseff -- deeply unpopular less than a year into her second term, amid steep recession and a huge corruption scandal -- a breather. She is scrambling to secure backers in Congress ahead of an eventual impeachment trial.

People march during a demonstration against re-elected President Dilma Rousseff  in Sao Paulo  Brazi...
People march during a demonstration against re-elected President Dilma Rousseff, in Sao Paulo, Brazil on January 31, 2015
Miguel Schincariol, AFP/File

As speaker, Cunha has the power to shelve or green-light impeachment requests.

Now the court-imposed delay has fueled feverish speculation in the capital Brasilia over how Cunha will play his next cards.

According to reports in the Brazilian media, Cunha might be seeking a deal or truce with Rousseff.

Under this, Cunha would supposedly hold off from launching impeachment proceedings in exchange for protection from his own opponents seeking to have him stripped of his speakership over the corruption allegations.

"The fact that I have to take decisions that some might see as a truce and others as a war is only a question of interpretation," Cunha said in response to the rumor.

- Rousseff's brave face -

Rousseff, who has been found by a court to have fiddled the nation's accounts ahead of her reelection last year, on Tuesday called the mounting impeachment threats "a coup."

But the opposition signaled Wednesday there'd be no let up in its drive against the unpopular president, saying it would file a new impeachment request with Cunha.

President Dilma Rousseff speaks in Sao Paulo  Brazil on October 13  2015
President Dilma Rousseff speaks in Sao Paulo, Brazil on October 13, 2015
Miguel Schincariol, AFP/File

This time the allegations will state that Rousseff's illegal accounting maneuvers not only took place in 2014 but also in her current term -- a key point if those charges are to be used for impeachment.

Rousseff put on a brave face Wednesday, traveling to Brazil's biggest city, Sao Paulo, and calling on the country to confront its economic challenges.

"Today we are passing through a period of difficulties. This period of difficulties obliges us to make efforts, to take measures, to tighten the belt a bit," she said.

But Rousseff also underlined that she would not see any damage done to the massive homes-for-the-poor program launched by her leftist Workers' Party -- a key element in her government's dwindling support base.

"We will not stop guaranteeing" the program, she said.

Earlier, reports emerged in the Brazilian media of a warning by the top army general that the political and economic turmoil threatens to turn into a "social crisis."

The controversial central figure in attempts to impeach Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff said Wednesday he will appeal a Supreme Court decision putting the brakes on the opposition’s push to unseat her.

Congressional lower house speaker Eduardo Cunha told reporters his appeal would be lodged “by Friday.”

A powerful politician fighting allegations that he took a $5-million bribe and hid money in Swiss bank accounts, Cunha had been expected to open impeachment proceedings against Rousseff as early as October 13.

That could have triggered a bruising battle sending Latin America’s biggest country from its current mix of instability and economic paralysis into full-blown crisis.

However, the Supreme Court caused a hiccup by ruling against technicalities in Cunha’s procedural plan for setting the impeachment process in motion.

This gave Rousseff — deeply unpopular less than a year into her second term, amid steep recession and a huge corruption scandal — a breather. She is scrambling to secure backers in Congress ahead of an eventual impeachment trial.

People march during a demonstration against re-elected President Dilma Rousseff  in Sao Paulo  Brazi...

People march during a demonstration against re-elected President Dilma Rousseff, in Sao Paulo, Brazil on January 31, 2015
Miguel Schincariol, AFP/File

As speaker, Cunha has the power to shelve or green-light impeachment requests.

Now the court-imposed delay has fueled feverish speculation in the capital Brasilia over how Cunha will play his next cards.

According to reports in the Brazilian media, Cunha might be seeking a deal or truce with Rousseff.

Under this, Cunha would supposedly hold off from launching impeachment proceedings in exchange for protection from his own opponents seeking to have him stripped of his speakership over the corruption allegations.

“The fact that I have to take decisions that some might see as a truce and others as a war is only a question of interpretation,” Cunha said in response to the rumor.

– Rousseff’s brave face –

Rousseff, who has been found by a court to have fiddled the nation’s accounts ahead of her reelection last year, on Tuesday called the mounting impeachment threats “a coup.”

But the opposition signaled Wednesday there’d be no let up in its drive against the unpopular president, saying it would file a new impeachment request with Cunha.

President Dilma Rousseff speaks in Sao Paulo  Brazil on October 13  2015

President Dilma Rousseff speaks in Sao Paulo, Brazil on October 13, 2015
Miguel Schincariol, AFP/File

This time the allegations will state that Rousseff’s illegal accounting maneuvers not only took place in 2014 but also in her current term — a key point if those charges are to be used for impeachment.

Rousseff put on a brave face Wednesday, traveling to Brazil’s biggest city, Sao Paulo, and calling on the country to confront its economic challenges.

“Today we are passing through a period of difficulties. This period of difficulties obliges us to make efforts, to take measures, to tighten the belt a bit,” she said.

But Rousseff also underlined that she would not see any damage done to the massive homes-for-the-poor program launched by her leftist Workers’ Party — a key element in her government’s dwindling support base.

“We will not stop guaranteeing” the program, she said.

Earlier, reports emerged in the Brazilian media of a warning by the top army general that the political and economic turmoil threatens to turn into a “social crisis.”

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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