Rio De Janeiro: A Brazilian minister resigned yesterday amid allegations that he enlisted President Michel Temer’s help to pressure a fellow Cabinet member to approve a luxury apartment development project in a preservation zone.
The announcement feeds a growing scandal over alleged misuse of power that threatens Temer’s presidency only six months after he replaced a predecessor ousted from office by Congress — and at a time corruption investigations have tarred many senior politicians.
At least one opposition party says it will submit a motion to impeach the new president.
Temer’s administration “just turned six months and it already looks old,” Fabio Zanini, political editor of the daily newspaper Folha de S.Paulo, wrote yesterday. “The strategy to win popular legitimacy with an economic recovery and political stability is quickly sinking for a president who was not supported by the popular vote.”
The latest crisis started when former Culture Minister Marcelo Calero told federal police that Temer’s legislative affairs minister, Geddel Vieira Lima, pressured him to allow construction of a luxury building in a historic preservation area in Salvador, 1,600km northwest of Rio de Janeiro. Lima had bought a unit in the planned development.
Calero, who resigned last week, testified that Temer himself suggested he use a method to avoid the normal oversight process for such a building.
Calero said Temer invited him to the presidential palace last week to suggest “a way out,” indicating that the building restrictions had created “operational difficulties” in his administration, according to Calero’s testimony.
“Politics has these things, that kind of pressure,” Temer said, according with Calero.
Temer’s spokesman said the president simply intervened to arbitrate a dispute between Cabinet members.
In his resignation letter, Lima said the accusations of wrongdoing were merely “interpretations.” He said he was stepping down because he and his family were suffering due to the accusations.
Lima is sixth minister in Temer’s government to resign amid allegations of corruption.
Several Brazilian news outlets reported yesterday that Calero had made recordings of conversations with Temer, Lima and presidential Chief-of-Staff Eliseu Padilha.
“I never acted in bad faith or in deceitful ways,” Calero said on his Facebook page. “I fulfilled my duties as a Brazilian citizen not to comply with illegalities and acts with respect to the institutions.”
The left-leaning Socialist and Liberty Party pledged that tomorrow it would submit a measure to Congress to impeach Temer. But to move forward, it would have to be accepted by Rodrigo Maia, Speaker of lower Chamber of Deputies and a Temer ally. Oliver Stuenkel, professor of international relations at the Getulio Vargas Foundation in Sao Paulo, said the scandal makes Temer’s future unpredictable.
“The damage can grow,” Stuenkel said. “There will be speculation about future and that will also delay attempts to pass reforms.”