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With The Economy Crashing, Brazilians Turn On A Once-Popular President

Protesters last month vent their anger over President Dilma Rousseff (left) moving to appoint her predecessor, Luis Inacio Lula da Silva, as her chief of staff — an action that would have shielded him from prosecution. A court blocked him from the post. Rousseff faces the possibility of impeachment while Lula is under investigation for corruption.
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Protesters last month vent their anger over President Dilma Rousseff (left) moving to appoint her predecessor, Luis Inacio Lula da Silva, as her chief of staff — an action that would have shielded him from prosecution. A court blocked him from the post. Rousseff faces the possibility of impeachment while Lula is under investigation for corruption.

Three years ago, NPR visited the port of Suape outside the northern Brazilian city of Recife when it was an example of Brazil's booming economy. Brazil's state oil company, Petrobras, has a large refinery that was working full tilt.

Today the scene is very different. That big Petrobras refinery still operates but it's had big layoffs. It's partially shuttered, weeds are growing on the side of the pavement. It's emblematic of what's happened here and in many parts of Brazil.

Last year, this northeastern state of Pernanbuco lost 89,500 jobs, the most in the country. It's been a devastating turnaround for this historically poor region.

Jorge Leonel do Nascimento, a stocky man with callused hands, is one of the men who suddenly found himself unemployed. He worked at Suape during the boom years and says he thought they would never end. He bought a car. Joined the expanding middle-class.

"I felt like I had achieved something," he said. "In 2011, it was good for everyone. People were buying properties, electrical devices for their homes. There was hope."

Asked who he credited for the good times, he said he voted for President Dilma Rousseff in the last two elections, and before that, for her predecessor Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, known as "Lula."

Nascimento says the Worker's Party, which goes by the acronym PT, was the only one that tried to change things in the poorer, blacker regions of the country. The party started a program giving money and food to poor families in the drought-stricken north that literally saved some from starvation.

"Before, we were abandoned by the other parties," he said. "When the PT came to the presidency, we became secure."

A Dramatic Turnaround

Or so he thought. When he was fired last year, he believed he'd find something else quickly. But it's been over a year and he's been doing odd jobs to make ends meet. Brazil's economy is in the worst recession in generations. All the social programs started by the PT are being scaled back.

A few miles down the road from Suape, you can see the impact.

At an appliance store, new refrigerators and televisions are on sale, along with most anything else you might want.

But Adriana Gomez, the general manager, says no one is buying. The economic crisis has devastated commerce here. And that has had an enormous political effect.

This region helped Rousseff win re-election in 2014. According to the polling company Datafolha, her approval rating in the northeast was 68 percent back in 2013. This past February it plunged to 16 percent.

Some people argue the massive corruption scandal involving the state oil company Petrobras is the reason people want Rousseff out. She hasn't been directly implicated in the scheme that saw billions bilked for kickbacks and bribes, but her party and many of its members, including former President Lula has been.

But Thiago de Aragao, a political analyst with Arko Consulting, says the political turmoil and the effort to impeach Rousseff is being driven by the miserable state of the economy.

The economy contracted 3.8 percent last year. Prices are going up by 10 percent a month. People are being fired. It's hard to survive politically while this economic disaster is playing out.

"We have a society in which corruption is highly acceptable by the society as long as the economy flows in a positive manner," he said. He points to another huge corruption revelation that took place in former President Lula's first term, where it was discovered that his government was paying politicians for their votes. Aragao says people largely ignored the scandal because the economy was expanding.

Unemployed port worker Jorge Leonel do Nascimento says he's now given up on politics.

"I feel like I was fooled. By Lula and Dilma," he said.

That car he bought in the boom years? He's selling it now in order to survive.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Lulu Garcia-Navarro is the host of Weekend Edition Sunday and one of the hosts of NPR's morning news podcast Up First. She is infamous in the IT department of NPR for losing laptops to bullets, hurricanes, and bomb blasts.