Brazil s president has been charged with bribery in the car wash scandal

Brazil’s president has been charged with bribery in the ‘car wash’ scandal

BRAZIL’S TOP PROSECUTOR has charged President Michel Temer with bribery, plunging Latin America’s largest country into what could be prolonged fresh political turmoil.

The bribery charge filed by Prosecutor General Rodrigo Janot swept Temer into the forefront of a giant graft scandal that has engulfed Latin America’s fattest country over the last three years.

Albeit several past Brazilian presidents and scores of other politicians are presently being investigated for corruption in the “Car Wash” probe, Temer is the very first leader in the country’s history to face criminal charges while still in office.

Temer acted “in disturbance of his duties to the state and to society,” Janot wrote, citing “abundant” proof that the president received bribe money.

For Temer to go on trial, the lower house of Congress must very first approve Janot’s charge by a two-thirds majority. Temer would then be suspended for six months for the trial.

Janot is also probing Temer for alleged obstruction of justice and membership of a criminal group. He could file those charges at a later date, ensuring a sustained legal onslaught.

However, Temer’s aides say they are certain he has sufficient support in Congress to get the charges thrown out.

In his very first comments since returning from a tour to Russia and Norway, the president was provoking.

“There is no plan B,” he said at a ceremony to sign a fresh bill in the capital Brasilia. “Nothing will demolish us — not me and not our ministers.”

The Eurasia Group risk consultancy said there was a seventy percent chance of Temer lasting to the end of his term through 2018.

“Temer still loves enough support in congress (at least one-third, or one hundred seventy two votes) to defend himself against the charges,” Eurasia Group’s analysis said.

“For most lawmakers, while there are now fewer incentives to openly support the Temer government, there are even fewer incentives to eliminate Temer from his seat.”

Temer’s latest approval ratings are just seven percent, lower than his deeply unpopular leftist predecessor Dilma Rousseff, whom he substituted last year after she was impeached by his center-right congressional allies for violating budgetary rules.

He took over promising to restore political stability and to steer Brazil out of its deepest recession in history with market reforms.

Yet the political capital he needs for those reforms, including the hugely unpopular proposal to cut back generous pensions and to free up labour laws, is rapidly slipping away.

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