FacebookTwitterGoogle+RedditEmail

Brazilian Coup Threatens Democracy and National Sovereignty

by

Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff is now threatened with impeachment, but there is no evidence that she is linked to the “Lava Jato“ scandal, or any other corruption. Rather, she is accused of an accounting manipulation that somewhat misrepresented the fiscal position of the government — something that prior presidents have done. To borrow an analogy from the United States, when the Republicans refused to raise the debt ceiling in the U.S. in 2013, the Obama administration used a number of accounting tricks to postpone the deadline at which the limit was reached. Nobody cared.

The impeachment campaign — which the government has correctly labelled a coup — is an effort by Brazil’s traditional elite to obtain by other means what they have not been able to win at the ballot box for the past 12 years. Former president Lula is accused of receiving money from corporations for speeches, and for renovations to a property that he claims he did not failedweisbrotown. But even if these accusations are true, there is no evidence of a crime or even a link to corruption. The alleged events took place after Lula left the presidency — and again, as in the U.S., former officials can legally get paid for speeches. Yet Judge Sergio Moro, who is leading the investigation, has led a well-executed smear campaign against Lula. He had to apologize to the Supreme Court for releasing wiretapped phone conversations between Lula and Dilma, Lula and his attorney, and even Lula’s wife and their children.

Of course the Workers’ Party would not be vulnerable to this coup attempt if the economy were not mired in a deep recession. But here too, the media is patently wrong, agitating for

further spending cuts and high interest rates that only worsen and prolong the downturn. To the contrary, Brazil needs a serious stimulus to jump-start the economy. Fortunately, the country has about $353 billion in international reserves, and is therefore not constrained by the balance of payments.

The main obstacle to recovery is the power of the big banks, which are like Wall Street in the U.S., but on steroids. Brazil is paying nearly seven percent of GDP in interest on its public debt — more than Greece at the height of its debt crisis. But Brazil has no debt crisis, nor any significant threat of default. Its usurious interest payments are a result of the political power of its own banks, who currently enjoy a record-breaking 34 percent spread between their borrowing and lending rates. Just reducing Brazil’s public debt service to its level of a few years ago would allow for a major stimulus — about 3.5 percent of GDP — that could pull the country out of recession.

The U.S. government has been quiet about this coup attempt but there is little doubt here about where it stands. It has always supported coups against left governments in the hemisphere, including — in just the 21st century — Paraguay in 2012, Haiti in 2011 and 2004Honduras in 2009, and Venezuela in 2002. President Obama went to Argentina to lavish praise on the new right-wing, pro-U.S. government there, and the administration reversed its prior policy of blocking multilateral loans to Argentina. It could be a coincidence that the scandal at Petrobras followed a major NSA spying operation that targeted the company — or not. And within Brazil today, the opposition is dominated by politicians who favor Washington. It would be an added shame if Brazil lost much of its national sovereignty, as well as democracy, from this sordid coup.

This column originally appeared on Huffington Post

Mark Weisbrot is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, in Washington, D.C. and president of Just Foreign Policy. He is also the author of  Failed: What the “Experts” Got Wrong About the Global Economy (Oxford University Press, 2015).

Weekend Edition
April 22-24, 2016
Jeffrey St. Clair
Bernie Sanders: the Candidate Who Came in From the Cold
Andrew Levine
One Small Step for Bernie, One Giant Leap for Humankind
Steve Perry
Life and Death in the Purple Box: Prince, What Happened?
Richard Hardigan
Ethnic Cleansing in Palestine: Home Demolitions on the Rise
Horace G. Campbell
New Push for Military Intervention in Libya: Who Will Control the Libyan Central Bank?
Luciana Bohne
The Fire Each Time
Paul Street
Kagame Goes to Harvard
Peter LaVenia
The Twilight of Liberalism: Decline of the Working Families Party
Andrew Smolski
A Note on Clinton’s Faux-Concern
Pete Dolack
Military Spending is the Capitalist World’s Fuel
Lawrence Davidson
Inside the Mind of Netanyahu
Linda Pentz Gunter
How Chernobyl Led to Austria’s Nuclear-Free Utopia
Eric Draitser
Hillary Clinton’s Support Base as Bogus as US Democracy
Sam Husseini
After Sanders — a Path to Electoral Revolution
David Underhill
Church and State in the South Forecast U.S. Future
Andre Vltchek
Defend Brazil!
John McMurtry
Beyond the Empire of Chaos: the Life Capital Solution
Nathan Riley
Bernie’s Sleepy Giant
John Laforge
Chernobyl, and Cesium, at 30
Paul Craig Roberts
Why is the Progressive Left Helping the Elite Elect Hillary?
Ramzy Baroud
Abbas at 80: Probed, Derided and Scapegoated
Robert Fisk
Oil and Amnesia: Obama and Saudi Arabia’s “Forgotten” Ties to 9/11
Dedrick Asante-Muhammad
Faltered Dreams: What the Deaths of Dr. King and Freddie Gray Say About the Nation
Roger Annis
Climate Change Emergency Shakes Canada’s Corporate Establishment
Louisa Willcox
Cattle in Grizzly Country
Colin Todhunter
Journalism, Pro-GMO Triumphalism And Neoliberal Dogma In India
Michael Welton
Is History a Tale Full of Sound and Fury, Signifying Nothing?
Gary Corseri
Catching Up with Cynthia McKinney… and Looking (Worriedly) Ahead
Mike Whitney
The Strange Death of Hugo Chavez: an Interview with Eva Golinger
Peter White
When the Fat Lady Sings
Edwin Nasr
On the Uprisings in France
Patrick Young
Getting Serious About Keeping Fossil Fuels in the Ground Means Getting Serious About a Just Transition
Ron Jacobs
Management: Your Friend Until They Aren’t
David Burgis
Dollar Swap: Hamilton v. Jackson
Edward Leer
Goodnight, Sweet Prince
Joseph Natoli
Core Beliefs and the Popular Tide
Robert M. Nelson
Bernie’s Right on Free Tuition — We Had It Once
Nyla Ali Khan
Extremism is the Bane of Our Existence
Jack Rasmus
IMF and TROIKA Contra Greece—Again!
Steve Horn
Introducing IOGCC: The Most Powerful Oil and Gas Lobby You’ve Never Heard Of
Missy Comley Beattie
I’m Not Cheering
Harry Clark
Dying to Forget the Israel Lobby?
Martin Billheimer
Another Witness Against the Beast
Charles R. Larson
Nigerian Literary Renaissance?
David Yearsley
Bad Day at Black Rock: A Savage Score for a Great Film About American Hate
FacebookTwitterGoogle+RedditEmail