Off the wire
Canadian wildfire reaches oilsands camps, forcing more evacuation  • U.S. stocks decline despite upbeat data  • U.S. Senate passes bill allowing 9/11 victims to sue Saudi Arabia  • Uganda to send team for 2016 Roma Rugby Sevens event  • France denies planning conference to resolve Lebanon's political crisis  • Terrorist killed, one arrested in Algeria  • (Recast) U.S. housing starts rise 6.6 pct in April  • Lebanon's Central Bank stresses implementing U.S. sanctions against Hezbollah  • World Bank's private lending arm plans to increase lending to Kenya  • Roundup: Postponing Paris meeting made upon Kerry's request: official  
You are here:   Home

Brazil's supreme court to debate impeachment petition against interim president

Xinhua, May 18, 2016 Adjust font size:

Brazil's Federal Supreme Court (STF) on Tuesday said it was analyzing a legal petition to open impeachment proceedings against interim President Michel Temer.

Supreme Court Judge Marco Aurelio Mello said the full court will debate the petition filed by lawyer Mariel Marley Marra, alleging Temer violated the law last year when he signed four decrees to modify the state budget, without the prior approval of Congress.

The petition had been struck down earlier this year by the Chamber of Deputies, the lower house of the Congress.

President of the supreme court Ricardo Lewandowski now has to set a date for the deliberation.

The move represents the latest twist in the unfolding political power struggle between Brazil's progressive and conservative forces.

Temer came to power on May 12, after President Dilma Rousseff was suspended by the Senate in the lead up to her impeachment trial.

Rousseff and her ruling Worker's Party (PT) claim the accusations of inflating public fiscal accounts are political motivated as the right-wing tries to take control of government after losing the presidential elections in 2014.

Temer is being accused of the same crime as Rousseff, that of signing decrees that granted government additional loans without authorization from lawmakers, Mello said.

Rousseff has been suspended for a maximum of six months, during which she will be tried. If found guilty, Temer would see her term through Jan. 1,2019. Endit