Saturday, August 1, 2015

Dilma’s Apologist

As Brazil’s political crisis has worsened over the past year, one of the country’s leading dailies, O Jornal do Brasil, has repeatedly revealed itself to be determined to support President Dilma Rousseff in every slant possible.

In an unsigned opinion piece entitled “Unemployment in Brazil and Europe: Where is the crisis really?”1 the paper takes the rhetorical approach of erroneously extrapolating global conclusions from a restricted subset of data. Reporting on recently released figures from the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics or IBGE (Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística) that indicate Brazil’s unemployment rate to be 6.9%, the paper belittles public and political concerns about the economy and the out-of-work population, referring to European nations with similarly high unemployment. The article cites specific figures for various countries representing an assortment of economic conditions:

France: 10.3% in May
United Kingdom: 5.6% in April
Germany: 4.7% in May
Italy: 12.4% in May
Portugal: 13.2% in May
Spain: 22.5% in May
and, of course, Greece: 25.6% in May

The article naively concludes that if no one is alarmed over economic crisis in France, Germany and the U.K., then Brazilians facing a similar rate also should not be alarmed. The commentary fails to consider the state of the respective economies, the role of the European Union as a stabilizing agent, and the underlying basis for the unemployment. It also glosses over the fact that both Spain and especially Greece are indeed alarmed about the dire state of their economies, with the latter facing possible economic collapse, political upheaval, and wide-spread social turmoil. Furthermore, the public perception of economic conditions in other countries neither negates nor validates consumer and voter confidence in Brazil. The newspaper implies that domestic uncertainties over the Brazilian economy are unfounded, and ignores the on-going political corruption scandal that has plagued the administrations of both Rousseff and her predecessor, Luis Inácio Lula da Silva.

This line of reasoning falls into the rhetoric of the Rousseff regime which is branding political opponents as illegal “coup plotters” (golpistas), especially the masses of protestors who have periodically taken to the streets calling for her impeachment. Apparently, Rousseff supporters including O Jornal do Brasil disregard the fact that the impeachment process is defined by the Brazilian constitution and was successfully implemented to remove democratically-elected president Fernando Collor de Mello in 1992. Indeed, the very possibility of impeachment was a significant democratic landmark when the current Brazilian constitution was promulgated after the demise of the military’s 20-year, undemocratic rule.  Almost all other major Brazilian media outlets and major political parties on both the right and the left of the spectrum are critical of the president, with founding members of Rousseff’s own Workers’ Party or PT (Partido dos Trabalhadores) publically denouncing the regime. 


It remains very unlikely that Rousseff actually will be impeached, but the on-going revelations about money laundering and influence peddling continue to undermine domestic and international confidence in an economy that had seemed robust while many developed nations struggled over the past decade.

Notes:
      1.  “O desemprego no Brasil e na Europa: onde mesmo está a crise?” Jornal do Brasil, 27 July 2015: