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Brazil attorney general urges new judge for key Rousseff case

Published 10/04/2015, 04:09 PM
Updated 10/04/2015, 04:19 PM
© Reuters. Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff speaks during a press conference to announce cabinet reshuffle at the Planalto Palace in Brasilia

BRASILIA (Reuters) - Brazil's attorney general argued on Sunday for the removal of a judge overseeing an investigation of embattled President Dilma Rousseff's accounts, a last-minute attempt to avoid a ruling that could lead to her impeachment.

Attorney General Luis Inacio Adams said Judge Augusto Nardes of the Federal Accounts Court, or TCU, had erred in making his position on the government's delayed repayments to state-run banks public ahead of Wednesday's expected vote.

Adams said he planned to present the argument for Nardes' suspension to the TCU on Monday. A decision on Nardes before Wednesday's vote will likely prove difficult.

"It is forbidden for a magistrate to express by any means of communication his opinion on a process before it is judged," Adams said in a rare weekend press conference.

Delaying repayments to state-run banks helped Rousseff continue funding social programs while improving the nation's fiscal accounts in her first term, ahead of her narrow win in last year's presidential election.

Nardes recommended the seven other TCU judges reject Rousseff's accounts because of the practice, two court officials briefed on the matter told Reuters on Friday, and his position appeared in several local media outlets.

Although not legally binding, a TCU ruling to reject the accounts would give the opposition ammunition to seek Rousseff's impeachment. The leftist leader has been weakened by the worst economic crisis in three decades and has seen her popular approval as well as her congressional support erode.

© Reuters. Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff speaks during a press conference to announce cabinet reshuffle at the Planalto Palace in Brasilia

Rousseff's planning minister and justice minister also pleaded for a technical, non-political ruling on the accounts.

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