Glenn Greenwald: Ousting Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff Empowered Criminality & Corruption
We spend the hour looking at the growing political crisis in Brazil and air an exclusive interview with former Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, who was impeached last August in what many described as a legislative coup. Her impeachment came as Brazil was engulfed in a major corruption scandal, but Rousseff herself was never accused of any financial impropriety. Her removal ended nearly 14 years of rule by the left-leaning Workers' Party, which had been credited with lifting millions of Brazilians out of poverty.
Since Rousseff's removal from power last year, Brazil's corruption scandal has only widened. At the center of the scandal are many of the right-wing politicians who orchestrated Rousseff's ouster. Rousseff's successor, Brazilian President Michel Temer, is now facing mounting calls to resign or be impeached, following explosive testimony released by the Supreme Court accusing him of accepting millions of dollars in bribes since 2010. Removing Dilma Rousseff "was just so perverse, because what you were doing was actually strengthening and empowering corruption," says our first guest, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Glenn Greenwald, who lives in Brazil. He notes that a third of Temer's Cabinet are now the targets of criminal investigations.