Brazil’s Coalition Party Warns President and Threatens to Become Opposition

Brazilian Representative Lincoln Portela Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff is “playing with fire” in the way it addresses relations with other partners of the ruling coalition warned Brazil’s Party of the Republic (PR), which is threatening to join the opposition conditioning the government’s majority in Congress. 

“Planalto Palace is playing with fire; there is dissatisfaction in the way the government deals with its allies, relations are not good, government should review this before August,” said Lincoln Portela head of the Party of the Republic Lower House block.

PR members have threatened to hand their posts in the cabinet and break off from government reported earlier this week Rio’s daily O Globo.

PR has 41 members in the Lower House and 7 Senators and in the event of a coalition resignation it could debilitate President Dilma Rousseff administration majority in Congress and governance of the seven months government.

Rousseff, who took office last January, has faced two major crisis, the first last June with the downfall of the powerful cabinet-chief Antonio Palocci from the ruling Workers Party who allegedly collected through his private consultancy from private corporations an estimated ten million dollars.

The second was triggered two weeks ago when Minister of Transport Alfredo Nascimento from the PR was forced to resign following revelations he had collected millions of dollars from contractors for the authorization of large public works

President Rousseff just sacked another fourteen top jobs in the Transport Ministry aggravating PR’s irritation which has begun to seriously consider abandoning the coalition.

In the Workers Party government there’s an “extended” corruption system, claimed opposition lawmaker Duarte Nogueira, head of the Brazilian Social Democracy, PSDB, benches in the Lower House and the main opposition force.

PSDB announced the creation of “a shadow cabinet” to follow and monitor government actions and accused former president Lula of leaving a “poisoned legacy” since he made the political agreement with the PR.

Lula, who is honorary president of the Workers Party, gave his support to the “cleansing” effort undertaken by President Rousseff but also said he was concerned, since clashes with PR “could contaminate the ten-party government coalition.”

“The PR is an allied party, there won’t be any rupture with government,” said Cândido Vacarezza head of the Lower House ruling Workers Party grouping.

However President Rousseff anticipated she would continue with the ‘depurations’ in government bureaucracy.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil’s Lula Invites Central America to Join Mercosur

The president of Brazil, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, during his official visit to ...

Second Largest Coffee Producer State in Brazil to Double Production

In order to increase productivity and improve the quality of Arabica coffee, which originated ...

Flower Power

Even after having been contacted by the women who found themselves pregnant while taking ...

Brazil Vows to Let Viewers Shape the Country’s New Public TV

Brazil's public television, TV Brasil, started broadcasting this Sunday, November 2. The government-sponsored television ...

Political Probe Hints There Will Be a Purge in Brazilian Congress

The chairman of the Post Office Parliamentary Inquiry (CPI), senator DelcÀ­dio Amaral from the ...

Genocide: 76 Indians Killed in Brazil in 2007. 63% More than in 2006

At least 76 indigenous people were murdered in 2007 in Brazil. This was the ...

A sextet who’s rewriting our music

They’ve come from all over: Bahia, Rio Grande do Sul, Rio, Săo Paulo. They’ve ...

Morumbi Favela spreaded around the rich Morumbi neiborhood in São Paulo, Brazil

Brazil Is a Fearless Country. And That’s Its Weakness.

Last week during a flight between Paris and Baku, Azerbaijan, I had the opportunity ...

Brazil Gathers Its Food to Show in Paris

The International Business Center (CIN) at the Federation of Industries of the State of ...

Nothing Short of a Miracle Can Save Brazil’s Varig Airline, Says Expert

The situation at Varig, Brazil’s flagship air carrier, has never been as critical as ...