Off the wire
World's longest, highest glass bridge to open  • Underage Australian girls caught up in online porn ring  • Flash flood leaves seven dead, 5-yr-old missing in NW China  • China, Venezuela to expand cooperation on logistics, energy  • Peru loses 155,000 hectares of forests every year: official  • Results of marathon swimming men's 10km at Rio Olympics  • Conflicts in Yemen kill 13 health workers in last one year and half: WHO  • Top news items in major Zambian media outlets  • Interview: Aung San Suu Kyi's upcoming visit to China set to promote bilateral ties: NLD  • Israel says Hezbollah cells busted in West Bank  
You are here:   Home

Rousseff proposes public vote on early election if surviving impeachment

Xinhua, August 17, 2016 Adjust font size:

Brazil's suspended President Dilma Rousseff said on Tuesday that she would hold a public vote on calling an early presidential election if she would be returned to the presidency.

She made the proposal in a long letter read out in Brasilia "to the federal Senate and Brazilian people" before a Senate impeachment vote against her scheduled for Aug. 25, four days after the end of the Olympics being held in Rio de Janeiro.

Rousseff was suspended in May over accusations of violating fiscal rules to cover up a huge budget deficit during her 2014 re-election.

In the letter, She reiterated her denial of the accusations, insisting that her forced removal from office would amount to "a coup."

"I am innocent," she noted, admitting mistakes had been made during her administration. She also said she accepted "tough criticisms" of her errors.

Rousseff repeated her proposal for the South American country to hold early elections to enable a new institutional form of politics which would overcome "the fragmentation of parties, make campaign financing moral...and give more power to the voters."

"The full restoration of democracy requires that the population decide what is the best way to...perfect the Brazilian political and electoral system. It is the only way out of a crisis," she said.

Rousseff vowed to call a plebiscite on whether to hold early elections if she would come back to power. Her current term ends in 2018. If she fails to survive the impeachment, interim President Michel Temer will serve out the term.

Amid growing discontent at Temer's interim administration, the idea of early elections has been gaining popularity and won 62 percent support in a Datafolha poll conducted in July.

However, holding an early election requires a constitutional amendment, and faces opposition from within Rousseff's Workers' Party.

The final phase of Rousseff's impeachment process is expected to last for about five days, and the actual judgement vote is reported to likely take place on Aug. 30 or 31. A two-thirds majority in the Senate vote is needed to remove Rousseff from office. Endi