The Daily Blog

Posts tagged Dilma Rousseff

Jan 3

Rousseff Sworn In as Brazil’s New President.

Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff, center, raises the arms of her Vice President Michel Temer, left, and outgoing President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva after her swearing in ceremony at the Planalto palace in Brasilia, Brazil, on Saturday.

BRASILIA, Brazil — Dilma Rousseff was sworn in as Brazil’s first female president Saturday, capping a rapid political trajectory for the career technocrat and former Marxist rebel who was imprisoned and tortured during the nation’s long military dictatorship.

Rousseff, 63, takes the helm of Latin America’s largest nation, which has risen both financially and politically on the world stage under outgoing leader Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

“I am going to consolidate the transformative work done by President Lula,” Rousseff said during a 40-minute inaugural address. “He changed the way the government is run, and led the people to trust in themselves.”Silva leaves office as the nation’s most popular president with an approval rating that hit 87 percent in his last week in office. Rousseff was his hand-chosen successor - and served as his chief of staff, helping shape his policies.

Brazil has made significant progress since Silva was elected. His social programs and wealth redistribution helped pull 20 million people out of poverty. On the brink of a sovereign default in 2002, it now lends money to the International Monetary Fund. Unemployment is at a record low, its currency has more than doubled against the dollar and the nation will host the 2016 Olympics.While proud of those gains, Rousseff said now was no time for her nation to relax.

“There is still poverty shaming our country,” she said. “I will not rest while there are Brazilians without food on their table, homeless in the streets, and poor children abandoned to their luck.”

Rousseff referenced those of her generation who fought and died at the hands of Brazil’s 1964-85 military dictatorship. Rousseff was part of an armed rebel group for three years before being arrested and imprisoned in early 1970. She spent three years in jail, during which time she was brutally tortured.

“That at-times tough path made me value and love life much more,” Rousseff said during her speech, choking back tears. “It gave me, more than anything else, courage to confront even bigger challenges. It is with this courage that I’m going to govern Brazil.”

Rousseff, wearing a white skirt and matching jacket, took the oath of office alongside Vice President Michel Temer in the national Congress. A heavy rain swept over Brazil’s capital, Brasilia, as Rousseff arrived at the Congress in a 1953 Rolls Royce, her hand waving out the window to the thousands of cheering onlookers. Her security detail comprised six young women, clad in black and running alongside the car through the downpour.

Rousseff takes on the formidable task of maintaining Brazil’s momentum.

In the eight years under Silva, Brazil sharply cut poverty while its economy boomed, and it has increased its political clout on the global stage. Brazil will host the 2014 World Cup and is expected to be the world’s fifth-largest economy by the time the 2016 Olympics come to the nation.

Huge challenges also await Rousseff, who served as Silva’s energy minister before becoming his chief of staff, where her tough managerial manner earned her the moniker “Iron Lady.”

In addition to sweeping improvements Brazil needs in its infrastructure, security and education, she confronts the danger of following the charismatic Silva, who leaves office with an 87 percent approval rating.

“Dilma will have to meet high expectations that the country is on an upward trajectory and life will continue to get better for the average Brazilian,” said Michael Shifter, president of the Inter-American Dialogue. “That will not be an easy challenge.”

Shifter said it could prove difficult for Brazil to maintain the pace of success it saw under Silva.

The external economic scenario could worsen, cutting into strong demand for Brazil’s agricultural and industrial exports, particularly if anything should dampen China’s growing appetite for Brazil’s goods. The Asian nation this year passed the U.S. as Brazil’s biggest trading partner.

And Rousseff will need a strong economy to improve the nation’s woeful airports, ports, and roads - all vital in transporting Brazil’s raw goods to market and in hosting the World Cup and the Olympics - events Brazilians hope will bolster their newfound image as a nation that gets things done.

Rousseff also will have to handle the unwieldy political coalitions required to govern Brazil. Silva, with his vast experience, his unique popularity and by sheer force of will was able to satisfy the leftist elements in his Workers Party, while at the same time employing orthodox economic policies to calm the business community that fretted early on about his socialist roots.

Rousseff lacks Silva’s political acumen and charisma and it is not yet known if she will be able to command the far-flung components of the Workers Party while also keeping other factions happy in a coalition government.But as Silva’s hand-chosen successor, and a Cabinet member of his government from its start in 2003, Rousseff has the power of continuity going for her.

“Dilma represents a great novelty in Brazil,” said Alexandre Barros, a political analyst with the Early Warning political risk group in Brasilia. “Before, every new government brought with it huge uncertainty. Everybody would shout about how Brazil was going to ruins. But now, with Rousseff, no. She represents what we’ve already seen.”


Nov 2
SAO PAULO (Oct. 31) — A former Marxist guerrilla who was tortured and imprisoned during Brazil’s long dictatorship was elected Sunday as the first female president of Latin America’s biggest nation, a country in the midst of a rapid economic and political rise. A statement from the Supreme Electoral Court, which oversees elections, said governing party candidate Dilma Rousseff won the election. With nearly all ballots counted, Rousseff had 56 percent of the vote compared to just under 44 percent for her centrist rival, Jose Serra, the electoral court said.In a 25-minute victory speech to jubilant supporters in Brasilia, Rousseff said that her first promise was to “honor the women” of Brazil and that she hoped her win would allow “fathers and mothers to look their daughters in the eyes and say, ‘Yes, a woman can.’” Known for her tough and serious demeanor, Rousseff only betrayed emotion when she spoke about President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Brazil’s hugely popular leader the last eight years who chose her as his party’s candidate to succeed him and used all his political will to get her elected.”The joy I feel with this victory today is mixed with the emotion of his farewell. I know that a leader like Lula will never be away from his people,” she said, using the president’s nickname as her eyes welled with tears and her voice cracked. “I will always be able to knock on his door and I’m sure that it will always will be open.” In his concession speech, Serra said he respected the voters’ decision and wished the president-elect good luck. Rousseff, 62, wasn’t scheduled to make any more appearances Sunday night. Beginning Jan. 1, she will lead a nation on the rise, a country that will host the 2014 World Cup and that is expected to be the globe’s fifth-largest economy by the time it hosts the 2016 Summer Olympics. It has also recently discovered huge oil reserves off its coast.Rousseff was a key player in an armed militant group that resisted Brazil’s military dictatorship - and was imprisoned and tortured for it. She is a cancer survivor and a former minister of energy and chief of staff to Silva. She possesses a management style that earned her the moniker “Iron Lady” - a name she detests. She is the daughter of a Bulgarian immigrant father, a lawyer who died when she was 14, and a Brazilian mother who was a schoolteacher. Her past points to an early political awakening.In 1967, as a 19-year-old economics student, she joined a militant political group opposing the dictatorship. For three years she helped lead guerrilla organizations, instructed comrades on Marxist theory and wrote for an underground newspaper. Rousseff denies carrying out any acts of violence during this period, says she opposed such action and notes she was never accused by the military regime of violent acts. After three years underground, Rousseff was captured in 1970 by Brazil’s military police and was considered a big enough catch that a military prosecutor labeled her the “Joan of Arc” of the guerrilla movement. She was tossed into the Tiradentes prison where she was submitted to brutal torture. After being released, she moved to southern Brazil in 1973, where she reunited with her now ex-husband, Carlos Araujo, who was also an imprisoned militant. She gave birth to a daughter and finished an economics degree. As Brazil’s dictatorship began to loosen its grip, Rousseff became more politically involved and campaigned to get her husband elected to the state congress in 1982. After holding appointed positions in city and state governments, Rousseff served for two years as the nation’s energy minister after Silva took office in 2003. She became his chief of staff in 2005, a position she held until resigning earlier this year to campaign. Rousseff says her political thinking has evolved drastically - from Marxism to pragmatic capitalism - but she remains proud of her radical roots. “We fought and participated in a dream to build a better Brazil,” she said in an interview published in the newspaper Folha de S. Paulo in 2005, one of the rare times she has spoken in detail about her militancy and torture endured. “We learned a lot. We did a lot of nonsense, but that is not what characterizes us. What characterizes us is to have dared to want a better country.” Associated Press reporters Marco Sibaja in Brasilia, Brazil, and Stan Lehman and Tales Azzoni in Sao Paulo contributed to this story.

SAO PAULO (Oct. 31) — A former Marxist guerrilla who was tortured and imprisoned during Brazil’s long dictatorship was elected Sunday as the first female president of Latin America’s biggest nation, a country in the midst of a rapid economic and political rise. A statement from the Supreme Electoral Court, which oversees elections, said governing party candidate Dilma Rousseff won the election. With nearly all ballots counted, Rousseff had 56 percent of the vote compared to just under 44 percent for her centrist rival, Jose Serra, the electoral court said.In a 25-minute victory speech to jubilant supporters in Brasilia, Rousseff said that her first promise was to “honor the women” of Brazil and that she hoped her win would allow “fathers and mothers to look their daughters in the eyes and say, ‘Yes, a woman can.’” Known for her tough and serious demeanor, Rousseff only betrayed emotion when she spoke about President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Brazil’s hugely popular leader the last eight years who chose her as his party’s candidate to succeed him and used all his political will to get her elected.”The joy I feel with this victory today is mixed with the emotion of his farewell. I know that a leader like Lula will never be away from his people,” she said, using the president’s nickname as her eyes welled with tears and her voice cracked. “I will always be able to knock on his door and I’m sure that it will always will be open.” In his concession speech, Serra said he respected the voters’ decision and wished the president-elect good luck. Rousseff, 62, wasn’t scheduled to make any more appearances Sunday night. Beginning Jan. 1, she will lead a nation on the rise, a country that will host the 2014 World Cup and that is expected to be the globe’s fifth-largest economy by the time it hosts the 2016 Summer Olympics. It has also recently discovered huge oil reserves off its coast.Rousseff was a key player in an armed militant group that resisted Brazil’s military dictatorship - and was imprisoned and tortured for it. She is a cancer survivor and a former minister of energy and chief of staff to Silva. She possesses a management style that earned her the moniker “Iron Lady” - a name she detests. She is the daughter of a Bulgarian immigrant father, a lawyer who died when she was 14, and a Brazilian mother who was a schoolteacher. Her past points to an early political awakening.In 1967, as a 19-year-old economics student, she joined a militant political group opposing the dictatorship. For three years she helped lead guerrilla organizations, instructed comrades on Marxist theory and wrote for an underground newspaper. Rousseff denies carrying out any acts of violence during this period, says she opposed such action and notes she was never accused by the military regime of violent acts. After three years underground, Rousseff was captured in 1970 by Brazil’s military police and was considered a big enough catch that a military prosecutor labeled her the “Joan of Arc” of the guerrilla movement. She was tossed into the Tiradentes prison where she was submitted to brutal torture. After being released, she moved to southern Brazil in 1973, where she reunited with her now ex-husband, Carlos Araujo, who was also an imprisoned militant. She gave birth to a daughter and finished an economics degree. As Brazil’s dictatorship began to loosen its grip, Rousseff became more politically involved and campaigned to get her husband elected to the state congress in 1982. After holding appointed positions in city and state governments, Rousseff served for two years as the nation’s energy minister after Silva took office in 2003. She became his chief of staff in 2005, a position she held until resigning earlier this year to campaign. Rousseff says her political thinking has evolved drastically - from Marxism to pragmatic capitalism - but she remains proud of her radical roots. “We fought and participated in a dream to build a better Brazil,” she said in an interview published in the newspaper Folha de S. Paulo in 2005, one of the rare times she has spoken in detail about her militancy and torture endured. “We learned a lot. We did a lot of nonsense, but that is not what characterizes us. What characterizes us is to have dared to want a better country.” Associated Press reporters Marco Sibaja in Brasilia, Brazil, and Stan Lehman and Tales Azzoni in Sao Paulo contributed to this story.