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Brazil's Congress and the Joy of Treading Mud While Staying in Place PDF Print E-mail
Written by Cristovam Buarque   
Tuesday, 22 April 2008 20:08

Brazilian senate In these weeks leading up to the 120th anniversary of the Abolition of Slavery in Brazil, I have spent some time reading the Chamber of Deputies' and the Federal Senate's records from the sessions in which the Congress was debating and approving the Lei Áurea, the law that banned slavery.

 

I read, among other things, the speeches of Joaquim Nabuco in favor of passage and those of the Baron of Cotegipe in opposition. Those were the years of the great debates about consolidating Abolition and the Republic.

The Congress geared itself towards national construction and the future course of the country. The Congressmen were the builders of a nation and their speeches presented different visions; they argued in opposition to each other and they united. These were the speeches and accords of statesmen.

Upon reading these session records, I recalled the debates occurring in the National Congress just as I began to be old enough to read the newspapers. I followed the speeches made during the so-called "Golden Years."

At that time Brazil was passing from an agricultural economy to an industrial one, moving the capital from Rio de Janeiro to Brasília, building the highway and hydroelectric infrastructures, setting up the Sudene program to develop the Northeast and the subsidies program for the industrial sector.

Each one of those decisions inspired vigorous debates. President Juscelino Kubitschek had to debate, mobilize allies, and argue against the opposition's ideas and proposals.

Alongside these great themes, there were accusations of corruption, of diversion of funds, of overbilling. But these were made with no reduction in time for the debates over the great themes that were discussed and disseminated through the newspapers and the radio at a time when there was no television, much less TV Câmara and TV Senado broadcasting the Congressional sessions.

They were debates about ideas and interests; they demonstrated different visions; and the speeches had consequences for the times. They did not exhaust themselves in either denunciations or dismissals and imprisonments, much less disappear into the void.

I followed the "Time of the Reforms," when the discussions were in favor of or opposed to the agrarian, labor, and tax reforms, and over international policy. There were heated debates between the left and the right over concepts, ideologies, new proposals and old ideas that had persisted. There were also denunciations of corruption but without a loss of direction for the great causes.

After that, although not yet in the Congress, I began to participate more intensely, by following the debates during the "Leaden Years," which were also considered the "Years of the Brazilian Miracle." The Congress demonstrated courage, boldness, risks, many countercharges and a belief in the future.

Here a country free or controlled was being constructed, one that was sovereign or independent, just or unjust, rich or poor. And for each of these roads, there were alternatives and debates. And these debates flourished, had repercussions, created supporters and opposition.

I participated even more in the "Years of Redemocratization," when the debates reflected what was happening in the streets and also had repercussions on them. The debates were over "what to do," "if it should be done," "how to do it," "when to do it." The Congress aligned itself with the streets and we achieved Amnesty, Direct Elections of the President, a Constitutional Assembly.

Today as a senator, I follow the debates from inside the Congress. Although I am part of them, I must recognize that we either have to deify History, showing the past as something grandiose in a way that it was not. Or we have to demonize the present and ignore the great accomplishments currently underway. Or we must admit that, compared to those of the past, our present-day debates have deteriorated greatly.

First, because we are not present in the Congress. We dedicate ourselves more to the important work of spending time with the population in each state than to the work of debating ideas, conferencing, approving laws, building a country.

Second, because we concentrate our speeches upon denunciations of corruption, reading of reports, subservience to the provisory measures. Instead of paving the soil of History, we apparently take pleasure in stepping in the mud without moving forward.

We correctly denounce corrupt actions but we do not debate measures to eliminate the corruption. We exchange denunciations about a government minister who used a corporate credit card to buy tapiocas, only to soon discover that an employee of the previous administration also paid for tapiocas with public resources.

Perhaps these will come to be known as the "Tapioca Years." Or will they be the "Forgotten Years" because, unlike those of Nabuco and Cotegipe, none of our speeches will be remembered in the future?

Cristovam Buarque is a professor at the University of Brasília and a PDT senator for the Federal District. You can visit his new website - www.cristovam.org.br - and write to him at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

Translated from the Portuguese by Linda Jerome - This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

Comments (9)Add Comment
Dr.Buarque
written by .., April 22, 2008
Great to read your article again. Thought provoking and intellectually stimulating. I have two questions for you:

1) What is your personal opinion on the recent events that occurred in UNB, where you are a faculty member?

2) What do you think about the recent declarations of General. Augusto Heleno Ribeiro Perreira ?

Thank you and I am standing by to hear your comments.
"we do not debate measures to eliminate corruption"
written by ch.c., April 22, 2008
Of course you do :
Senators even have secret votes.
Vote results : you pardon the corrupted politicians.

An official and legal way for them.....to continue corruptions at even larger scales !
hu
written by Forrest Allen Brown, April 22, 2008
as a person of power and privlage ,
what have you your self ever done for the people who put you in office . not your rich friends but the people that make $6000 reals or less a year .

what lower the food box price on the stock market . set chicken prices low enough
so every one can have some form of meat to eat .

no just your past gave freedom to slaves but never gave them the rights as humans
to free choice
Forrest
written by João da Silva, April 23, 2008
what lower the food box price on the stock market . set chicken prices low enough
so every one can have some form of meat to eat .


We are in big trouble, my friend and hence have to pool up our brainpower. The latest news is that:

1) Argentina has banned exports of wheat to Brazil starting from this week. Our alternative suppliers are the Yanks and Canucks. BUT,BUT, because of the higher fuel prices, the CIF cost of wheat is much higher than the one from Argentina.

2) Brazil also has banned the export of rice to feed us (I love both bread and rice), though the Bread prices are about to go up starting from May 1st (Mayday and may the souls of Lenin and Stalin R.I.P).

3)I propose that Jon & Gringo (the Canucks) and our fellow American bloggers (Never forget Bo) get wheat for the lowest price from your respective countries (of course subsidized by Ch.c in Geneva) and ship to us. Needless to say that you can quickly organize a fleet of ship to transport and the fuel cost will also be subsidized by Ch.c.

4) Once we agree on this, we all can go on the TV and announce that thanks to our selfless efforts, the Brasilians are not going to pay more for the wheat nor rice and they all have to go veggies, due to the high cost of Chicken,beef,poultry products,etc.

5) In the meantime, we expand your Chicken farm in PE, financed by BNDES.(We can also use Ch.c´s farm in BA)

This is my initial plan. All suggestions to enrich my project proposal are most welcome.
...
written by .., April 24, 2008
they will not go hungry
written by Forrest Allen Brown, April 24, 2008
Giving money and power to government is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys.

the poor can eat feathers and chaft

HAY JOAO YOU HERE THIS ONE
written by Forrest Allen Brown, May 01, 2008
TARPON SPRINGS, Fla. - Florida authorities confirmed that Deborah Jeane Palfrey, convicted of running a high-end prostitution ring in Washington, is dead in a suspected suicide, NBC News reported.

The body of the 52-year-old woman was found in a shed near her mother's mobile home Thursday morning in Tarpon Springs, about 20 miles northwest of Tampa. Police said in a statement that she left a suicide note, but they did not disclose its contents or how she killed herself.

Police did not immediately have additional comment when reached by telephone. Her attorney, Preston Burton, did not return a telephone call and e-mail message.


SOUNDS LIKE THEY PUT HER OUT OF THERE MISERY
Forrest
written by João da Silva, May 01, 2008
SOUNDS LIKE THEY PUT HER OUT OF THERE MISERY


It seems so.I read the news in msnbc.msn.com a couple of hours ago. What a pity.One Madam gets to pose nude for a magazine and make money and another one has to go this way. According to what I read Deborah had to go live with her Mom in FL after leaving Washington D.C. I wonder who did it.
...
written by Dá um tiro na bunda desses comunista!!, May 23, 2008
1) What is your personal opinion on the recent events that occurred in UNB, where you are a faculty member?

2) What do you think about the recent declarations of General. Augusto Heleno Ribeiro Perreira ?


Just what we didn't need here:
A s**t head, brainless, little communist.

Got late here, bro. In other times, you would be kicked off.

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