Minister Pans Brazil’s Law Giving Congressmen Right to Be Judged by Supreme Court

The president of Brazil’s Federal Elections Court (TSE, Tribunal Superior Eleitoral), Minister Carlos Velloso, criticized Thursday, August 11, the privileged bar enjoyed by legislators and the President of the Republic when they are tried for ordinary crimes.

During a debate at the International Conference on Challenges and Prospects for Strengthening Brazilian Political Institutions, in the Chamber of Deputies, Velloso said he is fearful that recent accusations of legislators’ involvement in irregular campaign financing will cause a bottleneck in the Federal Supreme Court (STF, Supremo Tribunal Federal).


“The Supreme Court has hundreds of criminal suits to judge. How many will there be now? The Supreme Court will not be able to clear the docket and lacks the capacity to make all these rulings,” he remarked.


The privileged bar allows federal deputies, senators, and the President of the Republic to be judged by the STF instead of regular courts.


According to Velloso, the function of the Supreme Court is to decide direct actions of unconstitutionality, not electoral or ordinary crimes.


“Lower court judges are the ones suited for such cases. When these cases are transferred to higher courts, it represents a privileged bar, a vestige of the Imperial era inconsistent with republican principles,” he emphasized.


In the opinion of the president of the TSE, the privileged bar contributes to corrupt practices in the country, because it assures politicians of impunity.


“Brazil is currently 52nd in the international corruption ranking. In each municipality there is a public prosecutor who is a judge, and he is the one who effectively supervises government accounts, preventing corruption. But political suits are not assigned to the lower courts,” he pointed out.


Velloso cited the example of the United States, where there is no privileged bar. “Former president Richard Nixon had to appear before a lower court judge,” he recalled.


Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Slavery Lives on, Say 76% of Brazilians

According to Brazil’s last census, the black population makes up 50 percent of the ...

Brazil Drafts National Health System to Help Fight Child Labor

Starting today, the fight against child labor will count on the assistance of workers ...

Brazil’s New Environment Czar Wants Zero Deforestation and Army Help

The new Environment minister of Brazil pledged Monday, May 19, to aggressively fight illegal ...

Brazilian Journalist Wants UN Army to Protect World’s Forests

To declare the world’s forest reserves and hydrographic basins as a humanity world heritage ...

How to Survive in the Jungle of Brazil Without Cash

Friends unexpectedly received from me a postcard from Manaus, Brazil, of a scantily dressed ...

Dell building in Brazil

Dell, Siemens and EMS Open New Units in Brazil, a 380 Million Investment

New units of three large industries were opened, earlier this week, in the city ...

Brazil Is Back to Square One on Its Dispute with AIDS Drug Maker Abbott

The expensive prices of the HIV/AIDS drugs charged by international laboratories may jeopardize the ...

Canudos 100

What a pity Euclides da Cunha is not around to write about today’s Brazil ...

A Brazilian and a New Zealander Share Eco Passion

Mayor Bob Harvey of Waitakere city, New Zeland, is to host the former Mayor ...

Brazil Wants to Know Why 242 Indians Committed Suicide

José Giacomo Baccarin, secretary of Food and Nutritional Security of Brazil’s Ministry of Social ...