Michel Temer

president of Brazil
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Also known as: Michel Miguel Elias Temer Lulia
Quick Facts
In full:
Michel Miguel Elias Temer Lulia
Born:
September 23, 1940, Tietê, São Paulo, Brazil (age 84)
Title / Office:
president (2016-2019), Brazil
Political Affiliation:
Party of the Brazilian Democratic Movement
Role In:
Petrobras scandal

Michel Temer (born September 23, 1940, Tietê, São Paulo, Brazil) is a Brazilian politician who became president of Brazil in August 2016 after the Senate ousted Dilma Rousseff in an impeachment vote.

He was the eighth and youngest son of Lebanese immigrants who had arrived in Brazil in 1925. Temer studied law at the University of São Paulo and the Pontifical Catholic University of São Paulo, earning a doctorate from the latter institution, where he later served as a constitutional law professor. In 1964 Temer joined the staff of the Department of Education of São Paulo state, and in 1970 he became state prosecutor. In 1983 he was named the state’s attorney general. The following year he became São Paulo’s secretary of public safety.

Having joined the centre-right Brazilian Democratic Movement Party (Partido do Movimento Democrático Brasileiro; PMDB), in 1986 Temer became a member of the National Constituent Assembly that drafted a new constitution for the country in 1987. He was elected in 1987 to the first of six terms in the federal Chamber of Deputies and served as its speaker three times (1997–99, 1999–2001, 2009–10). During his tenure in the Chamber of Deputies, he took a leave of absence to once again oversee the São Paulo Department of Public Safety. In 2001 he was elected president of the PMDB National Committee.

Labeled as the most influential congressman of 2009, according to the Inter-Union Parliamentary Advisory Department (Departamento Intersindical de Assessoria Parlamentar; DIAP), Temer went from serving his third term as speaker of the Chamber of Deputies and fifth as the head of the PMDB to assuming the country’s vice presidency when Dilma Rousseff, from the Workers’ Party (Partido dos Trabalhadores; PT), became Brazil’s first female president, in 2011. Temer was again Rousseff’s running mate when she was reelected four years later. Despite holding these high-level positions, Temer kept a relatively low profile and was arguably best known for his marriage (his third) in 2003 to a former model and beauty queen nearly 43 years younger than him.

In 2015 the alliance with the PMDB that had been forged by Rousseff’s mentor, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (“Lula”), began to crumble. That December, against the backdrop of the largest political scandal in the country’s history—the Petrobras scandal, in which members of both the Workers’ Party and the PMDB were implicated—Temer sent a letter to Rousseff complaining that his role in her government had been marginalized. Meanwhile, momentum was building in the movement to impeach Rousseff for allegedly having manipulated government finances to disguise budget deficits in the run-up to her reelection. In March 2016 the alliance collapsed when the PMDB decided to cut its ties with the increasingly vulnerable Rousseff and left the governing coalition. Rousseff argued that she was the victim of an attempted coup and accused Temer of leading a conspiracy against her. In April a leaked audiotape revealed Temer practicing a speech as if he were the president.

As a consequence of the Senate’s decision on May 12, 2016, to launch impeachment proceedings, Rousseff was suspended and Temer became acting president. When the Senate found Rousseff guilty on August 31 and removed her from office permanently, “acting” was dropped from Temer’s title as president, and he stood to complete Rousseff’s term, which was to last until January 2019. Although Temer’s name had been invoked in the Petrobras scandal, no charges had been made against him.

Rousseff’s downfall paralleled the collapse of the Brazilian economy, which by 2016 had slid into a recession that was widely characterized as at least the country’s worst since the turn of the 20th century. Temer sought to turn the economy around by adopting pro-market policies, pushing for the enactment of new labour laws and the restructuring of pensions, and introducing austerity measures, including cuts in public services. Temer’s policies began to show positive results as inflation and interest rates dipped. However, the president’s efforts were undermined by new allegations of his own involvement in the corruption scandal.

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In May 2017 an audiotape was released of a conversation between Temer and Joesley Batista, the chairman of a large meatpacking company, who had sought a plea bargain for his involvement in the Petrobras scandal. In the secretly taped conversation, Temer appeared to endorse the payment of hush money to Eduardo Cunha, the former speaker of the Chamber of Deputies, whose conviction on corruption charges had earned him a 15-year prison term. Moreover, Batista testified that Temer himself had received millions of dollars in bribes. Temer denied the allegations and refused to resign. Some observers argued that the taped conversation was inconclusive, but accusations of obstruction of justice and corruption led to calls for the prosecution of Temer, and initial steps were taken toward his impeachment. Temer’s public approval ratings, which had already fallen to less than 10 percent before the release of the tape, slipped to 5 percent following its release. Nevertheless, he remained popular with the so-called business class because of his efforts to right the economy through pension and labour reform, along with cuts to public spending.

In June Brazil’s prosecutor general officially filed bribery charges against Temer, but, in order for the president to be tried, two-thirds of the Chamber of Deputies had to vote in favour of suspending Temer from office for six months to stand trial. On August 2, following an especially boisterous debate, only 227 of the 513 deputies voted in favour of putting Temer on trial, well short of the 342 votes required. Nonetheless, the possibility that he still might be charged with obstruction of justice hung over Temer’s head.

His tenuous grasp on power had been otherwise threatened in early June, when Brazil’s highest electoral court began a trial to determine whether Temer had used illicit funds to finance his 2014 electoral campaign as Rousseff’s running mate. He faced the possibility that the court could annul the election results and force him from office. On June 9, however, the electoral court ruled 4–3 to dismiss the case against the Temer-Rousseff campaign organization, citing insufficient evidence.

In October Temer once again avoided going on trial, this time on another set of charges (including obstruction of justice) related to the scandal involving Batista and the meatpacking firm. The same two-thirds threshold in the Chamber of Deputies was required, and again the vote fell short: 233 deputies voted to put Temer on trial, and 251 voted against doing so. In the meantime, Temer’s public approval ratings had plummeted to 3 percent in some polls.

Natalia Cardenas The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica