Live Blog

Lula tries to rewrite history about his running mate

Former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, the frontrunner for this year’s presidential election, told a radio station on Tuesday that his running mate Geraldo Alckmin, a conservative former São Paulo governor, did not support the impeachment process against Dilma Rousseff, Lula’s understudy.

In 2016, Congress ousted Ms. Rousseff for doctoring the federal budget to hide the true situation of public deficits from voters and paint a rosy picture of the federal accounts. These budgetary shenanigans, however, were used as a pretext to jettison a head of state who had lost her ability to govern and steered Brazil into what was at the time the country’s worst recession on record.

“Geraldo Alckmin was not only against the impeachment but he also asked for a legal opinion on it, which was against [the ousting of Ms. Rousseff,” Lula told interviewers. “Please don’t say [he did], because Alckmin is a good man and a comrade who will help me rebuild this country.”

Lula has taken heat from sectors of the left for teaming up with Mr. Alckmin — and his detractors denounce what they see as utter hypocrisy the fact that Lula has teamed up with politicians who supported the impeachment — which the left still sees as a coup.

Mr. Alckmin did support the ousting of Mr. Rousseff by Congress. In 2015, he said impeachment is part of the Constitution and cannot, therefore, be a putschist affair. 

In March 2016, just weeks before the House suspended the then-president from office, Mr. Alckmin reaffirmed his support for the process. Once she was out, he said his party at the time “did well in supporting the impeachment and should make an alliance with Michel Temer,” the VP who took Ms. Rousseff’s place.

The failures of the Dilma Rousseff administration are a dent to Lula’s record, and adversaries use the fact that he handpicked her as his successor within the Workers’ Party to tell voters not to vote for him this year.

Gustavo Ribeiro

An award-winning journalist, Gustavo has extensive experience covering Brazilian politics and international affairs. He has been featured across Brazilian and French media outlets and founded The Brazilian Report in 2017. He holds a master’s degree in Political Science and Latin American studies from Panthéon-Sorbonne University in Paris.

Recent Posts

Brazil’s public accounts record slim Q1 surplus

The accounts of federal, state, and municipal governments, plus those of state-owned companies, recorded a…

2 hours ago

Rio Grande do Sul floods cast Brazilian football into uncertainty

The intense floods that chastise Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil’s southernmost state, have killed over…

3 hours ago

How to donate to Rio Grande do Sul flood victims from outside Brazil

Brazil's southernmost state of Rio Grande do Sul, a state the size of Ecuador, has…

5 hours ago

Southern Brazil is in Groundhog Day climate

In September 2023, an extratropical cyclone hit Brazil’s South region, causing heavy rains and floods…

5 hours ago

ADNOC gives up on Braskem acquisition

The Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) is no longer interested in buying Novonor's controlling…

1 day ago

Flooding in southern Brazil disrupts logistics network

Brazilian railway operator Rumo announced a partial interruption of its activities in southern Brazil on…

1 day ago