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Bush Should Use Brazil's Corruption to Show Real Friendship PDF Print E-mail
2005 - September 2005
Written by Alana Gutierrez   
Wednesday, 14 September 2005 12:38

Brazilian President Lula and his American counterpart, BushBrazil is now experiencing its latest political scandal in a non-stop history of woeful instances of corruption, which has chilled its spread of democracy. This scandal underscores current impediments preventing the achievement of public rectitude in the Americas - corruption, lack of transparency, scant accountability and the weak application of the rule of law.

However, this latest salvo of scandals signals that corruption has reached unprecedented proportions in Latin America's largest nation. The shame now lashing the Brazilian system reflects current political misfirings such as a lack of adequate anti-corruption safeguards as well as the application of few significant political reforms.

On that note, why isn't Washington paying closer attention to the ongoing scandal in Brazil, considering that it captures the essence of a fundamental impediment to democratic consolidation in the region?

The recent Fourth Global Forum on Fighting Corruption held in Brasília, on June 7-10 provided an opportunity to explore practical ways to fight corruption at all levels. Unfortunately, the meeting occurred at a tumultuous time for Brazilians.

President Bush stated, "The United States supports countries that embrace transparency, promote the rule of law and implement responsible economic policies, and through those steps contribute to the global fight against corruption."

On that note, the White House should fulfill its commitments through assisting countries facing Brazil's plight by accelerating the implementation of the Millennium Challenge Account, which it established to provide core development assistance to developing countries such as Brazil.

Political Corruption in Brazil

Despite Washington's counter corruption protestations, region-wide venality continues to flourish. Since the colonial period, political corruption in Brazil has flourished along two specific trajectories: the manipulation of political decisions to favor private economic gains, and through the illegal appropriation or the "detour" of public funds by politicians.

Interestingly enough, one of the rationales for the Brazilian military's seizure of power in 1964 was to "end political corruption." Ironically, the levels of political corruption increased significantly during the 21 years of the military rule.

The military eventually was forced to return to the barracks due to a wrecked economy, increased levels of corruption and the erosion of the armed forces institutional prestige. A decade later, Fernando Collor de Mello resigned his presidency amidst a rash of corruption charges.

The Scandal at Work

The 1992 crisis that forced Mello's resignation and the current one, have a common thread - MP Roberto Jefferson. Today's scandal was first unveiled in May with the broadcast of a videotape showing a midlevel political appointee in the postal service soliciting a bribe in the name of the parliamentary leader of the Brazilian Labor Party (PTB), Roberto Jefferson.

His political party is an ally of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's PT (Partido dos Trabalhadores - Workers' Party). In an attempt to deflect attention from his involvement, Jefferson disclosed a new scandal in an interview on June 6, 2005.

He insisted that the PT had solicited and disbursed illegal campaign contributions as well as bribed allied Liberal Party (PL) and Progressive Party (PP) legislators. The purpose behind the "monthly allowances" of 30,000 reais (US$ 12,500) from 2003 to early 2005 was to ensure support for the PT-sponsored legislative agendas.

If these allegations are confirmed, (as is the case on an almost daily basis) Lula's PT government would have built a de facto legislative majority entirely on corrupt foundations, through systematically purchasing the votes of the PL, PP and PTB parties.

This arrangement would throw into question the legitimacy of some of the major reforms adopted in Brazil in the past two years, such as the now tainted modification of Brazil's social security system.

The scandal intensified on August 11, when Duda Mendonça, who headed the PT's election campaigns since 2001, confessed that he had received 15.5 million reais (US$ 6.5 million dollars) in illegal, undeclared campaign financing. Mendonça said the money had come from the man at the heart of the corruption scandal, Marcos Valério Fernandez de Souza.

A businessman owning several PR-firms, Fernandez de Souza had big contracts with the government, and had "loaned" millions of reais to the Workers' Party during the election campaign. However, Mendonça adamantly insisted that the funds had not been used to finance Lula's presidential campaign.

What Makes This Scandal Different?

The PT party has always claimed to be an ethical party, in contrast to a number of other national parties considered to be well practiced in venal behavior. During his campaign in 2002, Lula, the founding father of the PT, pledged break with Brazil's traditional dirty politics by promising to clean them up by banishing corruption.

Lula even called for reforming campaign finance rules, emerging as a symbol of hope and honesty. He carried high the promise of 'rule by clean hands' that helped win for him the electorates' adoring trust. However, recent events have very much tarnished the PT and proved again that governability in Brazil remains in permanent crisis.

Since the beginning of democratic politics in 1985, Brazil's major political institutions have brewed a state of permanent crisis regarding the nation's governability. Simply put, its political machinery is predictably inefficient, unreliable and dishonest.

A good part of its political problems stem from basic design inadequacies. The country's multiparty system is highly fragmented and lacks effective integration.

The legislature is filled with weak, non-cohesive, and undisciplined political factions, while the electoral system is based on an open list of proportional representation with open lists without an exclusion clause.

The parties present regional lists of candidates, but voters may vote directly for individual candidates. This system makes it difficult for national party leaderships to discipline individual elected representatives, and it also fosters Brazil's traditional focus on personalities rather than institutions.

The reason here is that political campaigns are planned and financed less by political parties than by the candidates themselves, leading Dr. Barry Ames to observe that,

"Brazil's electoral system motivates deputies to seek pork." He further notes, "the ungovernable nature of Brazilian society is the result of a weak relationship between Brazil's national political institutions and the probability that the government will adopt new programs and policies."

Legislation and Implementation

Weak internal control mechanisms essentially have cultivated an abuse of power. Overall, Brazil lacks effective regulatory and legislative oversight. Demonstrably, Brazil's political elite historically has designed a political institution that better serves its members' interests than those of the nation.

Brazilian political institutions appear to generate incentives to primarily encourage unlawful practices such as delivering pork-barrel programs to political lawmakers and backers. In turn, bribery and pork projects are used as "short cuts" in order to achieve personal and political gains.

In Brazil, there truly is no deterrence from venality because the political elite is rarely charged or punished for it. This indicates that there is a serious failing when it comes to respecting the rule of law.

As a result, political credibility and respect for policy-making, as well as compliance with already existing laws that act as a shield against unlawful behavior, become invalid. In the end, an inefficient state is born from the ashes of immorality and injustice.

Conclusion

The democratic consolidation in Brazil cannot be achieved without attacking corruption head on. Fighting corruption requires an array of different initiatives, tools, and institutions. Corrupt practices undermine government institutions, impede economic and social development and cast shadows of lawlessness that only further erode the public trust.

Since the abuse of power serves the interests of the powerful and the rich, to the detriment of the poor, widespread corruption, in turn, worsens the level of inequality. Like the rest of Latin America, the most pressing problems Brazil faces today concern social and economic issues such as: improving economic development, reducing poverty, improving public health, and providing basic education.

Clearly, as long as Brazilian political institutions remain weak, corruption will be endemic, with few incentives motivating this deplorable situation from being redressed. If Brazil was democratically consolidated, the guard dogs of transparency would see to it that it be accompanied by the accountability of public officials through voiding the impunity that characteristically accompanies.

The fight against corruption is unattainable unless there is rule of law, prosecution, and equal access to a fair judicial state that can be counted on to render impartial decisions. Until functioning judicial systems and a state of transparency are established, the current corrupt practices will stick, a trait not only featured in Brazil, but also throughout most of Latin America.

Methods of Fighting Corruption (A Breviary of Initiatives)
* Fighting corruption by strengthening all forms of accountability - political, financial and legal - must be stepped up in order to aid the fight through various oversight mechanisms;
* Modernize the state and update the judicial system as means to fight corruption;
* Redesigning political institutions so that the rules of the game do not openly conspire against building or maintaining an institutionalized party system;
* Introduce political reforms and regulations to limit the capabilities of lawmakers to carry out unlawful practices.

The Intended Role of the U.S.

If the Bush Administration is committed to more than just rhetoric when it comes to implementing international anti-corruption measures, then it swiftly should take action and assist President Lula in the mess he has clearly authored.

After all, the US leader has noted that his administration provides millions of dollars each year to help governments around the world to fight corruption. The Bush Administration should inform Lula that it is committed in helping him through providing relatively small amounts or sharply focused development assistance.

Lula has been hurt by the scandal; more than that, it has grievously weakened him. The Bush administration could be making a serious mistake by deciding to now press on with an offensive to advance its FTAA, now that Brazil lacks neither the vision nor the political heft to oppose Washington's open market trade model.

Hopefully, Brazil's cluster of scandals will help highlight the current flaws and seemingly perpetual anti-democratic practices that are being wrongfully rewarded through the various international financial institutions' and private banks' funding packages and development assistance projects that have less to do with bandaging Brazil's wounds than keeping it within the perimeters of Washington's trade plans for the region.

The U.S. has an opportunity to take advantage of this scandal and Brazil's shackled president. It could also choose to turn the malaise surrounding Lula into a positive outcome, not by taking an advantage of Brazil being, at least temporarily, on the ropes, but by sharing effective oversight mechanisms that the U.S. government now uses, especially procedural rules and implementation techniques, which effectively, are sadly not in place in the Latin America giant.

For More Information:
Ames, Barry. The Deadlock of Democracy in Brazil. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press. 2002

This analysis was prepared by COHA Research Fellow Alana Gutierrez.

The Council on Hemispheric Affairs (COHA) - www.coha.org - is a think tank established in 1975 to discuss and promote inter-American relationship. Email: coha@coha.org.



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Comments (12)Add Comment
Yessssss......
written by Guest, September 14, 2005
....your elected politicians use your country as their farms and the citizens as their slaves farms !!!!!

This explain the ideology of being elected !
the higher your political power is...the more wealth you can amass...through illegal means that is very rarely and seldomly punished...anyway !

Look at today's decision of your Supreme Court :
out of the 18 other members that could be also expelled, the Supreme Court said to stop the investigations and threats of expulsion...for only 6 members !!!
It appears that the 6 members are ALL from the PT party !!!!!!
If that is what you call fair or democracy....please clarify !!!!!!!!
One can call that....cover up...or protection...from the highest legal people !!!!!
US Help?
written by Guest, September 15, 2005
"Bush Should Use Brazil's Corruption to Show Real Friendship"

Bush should do a lot of things for his own people.

Anyway, I do not see how this would be beneficial for us. What difference would make for the Brazilian democratic process a friendship from the American president? What could he do to improve our democracy?

They have enough problems internally (Bush himself is facing a loss of prestige in the US) and externally to even think about Brazil.

We should take care of ourselves without influence from any other country. We should start acting like grown ups.
grown ups ??????????
written by Guest, September 15, 2005
...eventually...if you can ????

But can you ????

True numbers are not the ones that Lula pretends....unfortunately for your society !!!

The world love Brazilians...but not their politicans from left to right with their social injustices, inequalities, corruptions, lack of health, sanitation, basic education, respect for the poors !!!

Your country land is their large farms and citizens are their slaves. They have no intention to change...but every intention to keep it that way !!!!

Wake up, Stand up !!!!
grown ups ??????????
written by Guest, September 16, 2005
I am sorry but don’t you think that you exaggerate a little in your punctuation?

????? !!!!! ……

What those extras are supposed to mean?

The world loves us Brazilian, you say, but why? We are not better or worse than any other people.
Brazil
written by Guest, September 16, 2005
I thought that Brazil only had Samba, beaches, carnival and football. That is the Brazil 'I Love'. What a shock it also has political, social and economic problems, just like anywhere else.

Big Brother!
written by Guest, September 16, 2005
Keep the gringos out of this....Build the infrastructure that carries long sentences for corrupt politicians and, new legislation that expose the privacy (financial records) of anyone involved in government.

10-20-30 years sentences for these scum politicians will go a long way at which point, the democracy will self adjust.

keol
Head up their ass.
written by Guest, September 16, 2005
The politicians never read these advices or this site. They are the problem, not the solution. They've a degree in corruption 101. That's why they have their head up their ass. Politicians never go to prison, they retire in Florida, U.S.A.
The real Brazilian problem!!!
written by Guest, September 18, 2005
August 9, 2005 -- U.S. base in Paraguay established to protect Sun Myung Moon's water and land resources. With U.S. troops currently protecting Halliburton's oil operations in Iraq and the CentGas pipeline in Afghanistan, U.S. troops are now being sent to Paraguay, complete with immunity from criminal prosecution by Paraguay or the International Criminal Court, to protect the millions of acres of Paraguayan water and land resources bought over the years by religious cult leader Sun Myung Moon. It is not coincidental that Moon's Unification Church has many followers within the Bush administration. Last month, 500 U.S. troops arrived in Paraguay to expand the Mariscal Estigarriba air base to handle large U.S. military transport planes. Moon's land acquisitions in Chaco Province are just north of the huge Guarani aquifer, one of the world's largest sources of fresh water. In addition, Moon has acquired large tracts of land on the Brazilian side of the Paraguayan border. Local villagers in Paraguay and Brazil claim that most of Moon's land acquisitions were fraudulent and illegal. Moon's World Unification Church operates in Paraguay under a corporate contrivance called the Victoria Company. Paraguay has also announced that everyone entering and leaving Paraguay will be photographed and fingerprinted. Not coincidentally, the new border control system is being financed by South Korea.



The Moon King of Paraguay: Protected by U.S. Troops

There is clearly a split within the Paraguayan government, with the Vice President and Pentagon neo-con ally Luis Castiglioni negotiating, along with a majority in the Paraguayan Congress, close bilateral military ties with the United States, apparently without the concurrence of President Nicanor Duarte. It is no coincidence that considering the oil-centric Bush administration, the Mariscal Estigarriba air base is close to large Bolivian natural gas reserves in the neighboring Bolivian provinces of Santa Cruz and Tarija.

The U.S. move in Paraguay comes at the same time the U.S. is stepping up its "counter-narcotics" operations from its Manta, Ecuador base and Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez is accusing the United States of using Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) personnel in Latin America as espionage agents trying to destabilize his government. In addition, the Paraguayan military operations are seen as a Bush administration attempt to intimidate neighboring Bolivia, where MAS Socialist party and coca farmer (cocalero) leader Evo Morales is poised to become the next President in scheduled December elections after years of popular demonstrations which saw Bolivian workers and peasants deposing a series of pro-U.S. presidents. A Morales government would add another anti-U.S. and free trade government in South America, joining Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, and Venezuela.

So soon, the mothers and fathers of U.S. military personnel will be able to take comfort in sacrificing the lives of their sons and daughters for a self-proclaimed Messiah, a non-English speaking Korean who claims to have saved the souls of Jesus, Moses, Mohammed, Buddha, Stalin, and Hitler and communicates regularly with others in his departed flock of adherents, including all the deceased Presidents of the United States (who, Moon claims, appointed Richard Nixon as their spokesman from the "hereafter").

August 10, 2005 -- Moonie Alert! As a follow-up to the article below on U.S. troops arriving in Paraguay to protect Sun Myung Moon's land holdings, there is this alarming report: Moon Unification Church official and Washington Times deputy managing editor Josette Sheeran Shiner has been nominated by President Bush to be U.S. Alternate Governor of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the Inter-American Development Bank, the African Development Bank, the Asian Development Bank, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, and the African Development Fund. Shiner has also been nominated to be a member of the Board of Directors of the Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC). Shiner, who has been Deputy U.S. Trade Representative, became a member of Moon's cult in 1975 when she was recruited in college. Moon's phenomenal wealth has been linked to Asian organized criminal gangs; gambling businesses in Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Macao; and Asian prostitution rings. Now one of his followers will be involved with multi-billion dollar loans for projects and programs in the world's developing nations. Nice move Mr. Bush!

Shiner on Harvest Moon -- Used to be a time when people who worshipped Moons were committed to institutions as lunatics, now they serve in the Bush administration.

Help those who help themselves
written by Guest, September 18, 2005
The pure arrogance of what was once was the PT party and the Brazilian judiciary would be laughable if not so tragic. The time honed practice of Brasilians in power has reached a remarkable point. Corruption of this sort has started revolutions on some parts of the planet, when will Brasilians who love their country respond and take responsibility for themselves instead of expecting the Lula's of the world to take care of them. Don't expect any help from the US or the rest of the West, while they supported and tolerrated Lula as an idiot who they were pleased to realize could cause no great harm, his downfall balances the "Chavez factto" in the region, as when (not if) Brasil goes down...it takes all it's neighbors with it. This is what the US hopes for, another example of the un-washed masses unable to take care of their business without US help, what a shame as they seem correct. The region will once again be just what the US wants when the new leftist fail, stooges again of US policy.
Help yourself
written by Guest, October 02, 2005
I can never fathom why Brazilans want others to take the lead to help to solve THEIR problems insetead of acting like adults and doing for themselves what has to be done! What about a novel concept: stop waiting for what the US sould or should not do and you do it?

And before the stones are thrown, I AM BRAZILIAN.
what can we do?
written by Samie, December 07, 2006
well I am brazilian too and i study international relations in California. the problem is not thet brazil's citizens are waiting for outsiders to solve their problems. The real problem is that majority of the population is not educated and therefore is living day by day hoping for a meal everytime. The minimum wage in brazil is 200 dollars a month considering that the government taxes the people almost 40% of the value of the food and 605 of the value of goods. It is very easy to blame on the population when the key to turn the game is educating them about the national and international process. it is true that a small percentage goes to school, but 80% os those people go to private schools ( the public sector of education sucks), and their view of how poilitics works is blured. They have seen promises for centuries and all they have is corruption and deshonesty. they gave up on their own country! Why do you think brazilians only love their country during world cup? because thatis when they CAN be proud of who they are.
Politics is not the problem, but the polititions.
Things will not change over night. there is a very deep culture in which "there is no way out. lets just accept it and let it go"
...
written by LNR, March 24, 2009
As an American who has lived in Brazil for 13 years, I have gone through various stages of horror, rejection, and indifference to Brazil's political culture. Brazilian politicians are at once a part of, and separate from, the Brazilian people. It is very difficult for one who is outside of such a culture to understand what this means. It has to do at its foundations with the genesis of the country. Brazil was established along the European royalty model of titles and ownership, and complete subjugation of the population. "Nation building" in the U.S.A. sense of the term has never been a priority of Brazilian leadership. Personal fortune, patronage, and total immunity are the hallmarks of Brazilian politics, as they were throughout Europe centuries ago. Whereas Europe has since had its revolutions and movements of equaliy, human rights, and popular inclusion (all of which lead to a more informed and active populace), the story of Latin American evolution to democracy has been different. It is the story of the continuation of "royalty" under the guise of democratic nomenclature; "President" the king, "Senator" the baron, and so on. Politicians feel themselves to be such, and the general populace doesn't have the experience or education to know the difference (it is rare to find a Brazilian who would characterize the office of 'President' as simply an important public servant position. Those who would recognize that they can't change things in such small numbers). The abuses of power so well documented in old Europe continue here, and more importantly, the mentality of powerlessness and subjugation continue. These are VERY difficult to combat from within when the judiciary is just another political arm to perpetuate the status quo. My hope is that Globalization will do the work of tightening up the Brazilian ship. In order to compete in a world increasingly prepared for business, transparency, the rule of law, and true dedication to education and growth must develop, or Brazil will fall by the wayside despite its size and wealth.

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