Brazil Senate votes to hold Dilma Rousseff impeachment trial

Suspended Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff attends a news conference with foreign media in Brasilia, Brazil.
Suspended Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff attends a news conference with foreign media in Brasilia, Brazil.
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AFP, Brasilia :Brazil’s Senate early Wednesday voted to hold an impeachment trial for the nation’s suspended president Dilma Rousseff, a process that could see her permanently removed from office.The vote in favor of trying Rousseff, who was suspended from the presidency in May, was 59 in favor, 21 against.The Senate suspended Rousseff, the South American nation’s first female president, on May 12 over accusations of illegal accounting practices and fiddling the budget to mask a slumping economy.The timing of the impeachment vote could hardly be more awkward for Brazil, which was meant to be showcasing its burgeoning economic clout and political stability with South America’s first Olympics.Rousseff, 68, has likened the impeachment drive to a putsch by her political enemies.The impeachment trial is set to open around August 25 — four days after the Olympics closing ceremony — and is expected to last five days, concluding with a judgment vote.The impeachment of Rousseff, a former leftist guerrilla and the first woman to lead Brazil, has paralyzed Brazilian politics since the start of the year, deepening a crisis set off by a massive kickbacks and bribery scandal at state-led oil company Petrobras.The outcome of the vote is a foregone conclusion because opponents of Rousseff, who was suspended in May, need only a simple majority in the 81-seat Senate to put her on a trial.A final verdict expected at the end of the month will require two thirds of the votes. Media surveys of the Senate point to defeat for Rousseff and the end of 13 years of her Workers Party rule.Meanwhile, the Senate suspended Rousseff, the South American nation’s first female president, on May 12 over accusations of illegal accounting practices and fiddling the budget to mask a slumping economy.Rousseff, 68, has likened the impeachment drive to a putsch by her political enemies.The impeachment trial is set to open around August 25 — four days after the Olympics closing ceremony — and is expected to last five days, concluding with a judgment vote.

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