Quick Facts
In full:
Dilma Vana Rousseff
Born:
December 14, 1947, Belo Horizonte, Brazil (age 77)
Title / Office:
president (2011-2016), Brazil
Political Affiliation:
Workers’ Party

Dilma Rousseff (born December 14, 1947, Belo Horizonte, Brazil) is a Brazilian politician who in 2011 became Brazil’s first female president. She was reelected in 2014 but impeached and removed from office in 2016.

Early life and political career

Rousseff was raised in an upper-middle-class household. Her father was a lawyer who immigrated to Brazil from Bulgaria, and her mother was a teacher. In 1964 Brazil’s president was overthrown by a coalition of civilian and military officials, and the teenaged Rousseff became involved in the left-wing opposition to the government. She was associated with the militant group National Liberation Command (Comando de Libertação Nacional; Colina), and she married fellow activist Cláudio Galeno Linhares in 1968. After a raid on a Colina safe house resulted in police fatalities, the pair went into hiding in Rio de Janeiro. She and Galeno later fled Rio de Janeiro for Porto Alegre, subsequently separated, and in 1981 divorced. Rousseff moved to São Paulo, and it was there in 1970 that she was arrested by government forces. She was imprisoned for three years on the charge of subversion and during that time was subjected to torture by her captors.

Upon her release in 1973, Rousseff resumed her education; she graduated with a bachelor’s degree in economics from the Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul in Porto Alegre in 1977. As the grip of the dictatorship weakened, Rousseff became active in local politics, and she was appointed finance secretary for Porto Alegre in 1986. She left that position in 1988 and later spent two years as president of the Foundation of Economics and Statistics of Rio Grande do Sul state (1991–93). She returned to government work in 1993 as secretary of mines, energy, and communications for Rio Grande do Sul, and she was credited with increasing energy efficiency and power production within the state. Rousseff left that post in 1994 and later pursued a Ph.D. in economics. Before receiving the degree, however, she was called back to her former government post in 1999, and it was there that she became affiliated with Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s Workers’ Party (Partido dos Trabalhadores; PT). Her standing in the party quickly rose, and she left her government job in 2002 to serve on the staff of Lula’s successful presidential campaign.

Upon taking office in 2003, Lula appointed Rousseff minister of mines and energy, and she was named chair of the Brazilian state-run oil concern Petrobras. Rousseff emphasized the need for Petrobras to expand its production capacity, and in 2005 Lula appointed her his chief of staff. An expanding economy and a shrinking poverty rate boosted Lula’s popularity, but he faced a constitutional limit of two terms, so he began grooming Rousseff to be his successor. She stepped down from Petrobras in March 2010 to prepare for her presidential campaign. In the first round of voting, in early October, Rousseff failed to capture the 50 percent of votes needed to avoid a runoff. In the second round, held later that month, she won a commanding victory, capturing some 56 percent of votes. She was sworn into office on January 1, 2011.

Presidency

Rousseff outlined a domestic agenda that focused on the maintenance of economic stability, poverty eradication, political reform, tax reform, and job creation. Her foreign policy stressed human rights, multilateralism, peace, and nonintervention. In August she launched a new industrial policy, “Larger Brazil,” that included “buy Brazilian” provisions and tax cuts for industry. In November she signed a landmark law that established a truth commission to investigate the disappearances and human rights abuses during military rule.

Throughout 2011, Rousseff’s administration faced accusations of corruption. By the end of 2011, investigations into multiple allegations of corruption and the possibility of congressional inquiries had led to the resignation of five cabinet ministers, all holdovers from the Lula administration. In November 2012 six more Brazilian government officials were arrested on charges of influence peddling and corruption. Rousseff fired two of them. Meanwhile, the trial of the largest political corruption scandal in Brazilian history was winding down. The case, dubbed the mensalão (“big monthly bribe”), involved a scheme to bribe members of the Chamber of Deputies, and it was alleged that Lula had been involved.

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All this occurred as the Brazilian economy cooled down considerably, with the gross domestic product slipping from a growth rate of about 7.5 percent in 2010 to 1.0 percent growth in 2012. In response, the central bank pursued an aggressive policy of interest-rate reduction and lowered the reserve requirement for Brazilian banks, which injected liquidity into the economy, helping to keep the unemployment rate low and buoying Rousseff’s popularity. In September 2012, under pressure from industry to cut the costs of electricity, Rousseff announced a “provisional measure” that created a mechanism to reduce energy prices by an average of about 20 percent and renewed for up to 30 years the concessions from electricity plants set to expire in 2015–17.

Brazil’s political landscape was transformed by massive, sometimes violent street protests that began in São Paulo in June 2013 and spread throughout the country. The demonstrations were staged mainly by a growing middle class that was increasingly anxious about government corruption, the country’s disappointing economic performance, and poor delivery of public services, especially in light of the billions spent by the government on infrastructure and to build and upgrade stadiums for the football (soccer) World Cup competition that the country would host in 2014 and Summer Olympic Games that Rio de Janiero was scheduled to host in 2016. Rousseff’s response to the unrest included a controversial plan to attempt to remedy Brazil’s shortage of physicians by bringing in foreign doctors, especially from Cuba. The demonstrations contributed to a drop in Rousseff’s approval rating from 65 percent to 30 percent at one point during 2013.

In September 2013, revelations by former Central Intelligence Agency analyst Edward Snowden of U.S. intelligence monitoring of e-mails of Rousseff, her fellow citizens, and Petrobras led to the postponement of what would have been the first state visit by a Brazilian leader to Washington in more than 18 years, straining a relationship that both countries had worked hard to improve. Speaking at the United Nations (UN) at the end of September, Rousseff openly criticized the U.S. spying activities and proposed the creation of a UN-based regulatory framework for the Internet.

As the staging of the World Cup itself went largely according to plan, Rousseff’s popularity rebounded. The Brazilian team did Rousseff no favour, however, when it suffered arguably the worst loss in the country’s illustrious World Cup history, falling to Germany 7–1 in a semifinal match and turning the attention of the football-crazy country back to its social and economic ills. (The Brazilian economy had slid into recession at the beginning of 2014.) Nevertheless, Rousseff appeared to have a solid lead in the preference polling for the upcoming first round of presidential elections—until the Brazilian Socialist Party candidate, Eduardo Campos, died in a plane crash in August. He was replaced by his running mate, green activist Marina Silva, whose candidacy seemed to resonate strongly with the electorate. Moreover, with the October 5 election approaching, Brazil refused to join more than 150 other countries in signing an anti-deforestation pledge at the climate-change summit in New York City in September, claiming that the pledge had been drafted without Brazilian participation.

Rousseff responded aggressively to Silva’s challenge with one of the most negative campaigns in the country’s recent electoral history. In the process, Rousseff won the first round of voting with about 42 percent of the vote (shy of the 50 percent necessary to prevent a second round) and derailed the candidacy of Silva, who finished with just 21 percent. Rousseff faced a formidable challenge in the October 26 runoff, however, from Aécio Neves of the Brazilian Social Democratic Party, the pro-business center-right former governor of Minas Gerais, who surged in the final weeks of the campaign to capture some 34 percent of the vote. Despite Silva’s endorsement of Neves, Rousseff triumphed in the runoff to win a second term, capturing more than 51 percent of the vote in contrast to more than 48 percent for Neves.

That second term got off to a horrible start, as the economy continued to worsen and a new scandal swelled to exceed the impact of the mensalão affair. By March 2015 dozens of high-level businesspeople and politicians had been indicted as part of a widespread investigation alleging that many millions of dollars had been kicked back to Petrobras officials, the PT and its members, and members of the PT’s coalition partner, the Party of the Brazilian Democratic Movement (PMDB), by prominent Brazilian corporations, including a cartel of construction companies, in return for contracts with Petrobras (see Petrobras scandal). Although Rousseff had served as chair of Petrobras for a period that largely overlapped with the alleged kickbacks, an investigation by the attorney general cleared her of any wrongdoing. Many Brazilians, however, doubted that she could have been ignorant of those goings-on. Huge antigovernment and anti-scandal demonstrations took place in São Paulo and across the country on March 15, and Rousseff’s approval rating plummeted to 13 percent. On April 12, massive demonstrations were again staged throughout Brazil. Though the crowds were smaller than those in March—the total number of demonstrators was estimated to be in the hundreds of thousands rather than March’s million or so demonstrators—the focus was on a call for Rousseff’s impeachment.

Central to the efforts to impeach Rousseff were accusations that she had overseen the misuse of state bank funds to mask budget deficits in the run-up to the 2014 presidential election. In the meantime, Brazil’s economy remained mired in recession, the GDP having contracted by some 3.7 percent in 2015, with the value of the real tumbling and business confidence eroding. Some observers characterized the economic crisis as the country’s worst since the turn of the 20th century, and the rapidly growing body of Rousseff’s critics were quick to blame the economic policies of the president.

Her hopes of pushing austerity measures through the legislature and winning public support for them were stymied by the ever-growing Petrobras scandal, the multiplying tentacles of which ensnared Lula in March 2016. Early in that month police raided the home of Rousseff’s mentor and briefly held him for questioning. Roughly a week later prosecutors charged Lula with money laundering, related to his ties to a huge construction company, for having allegedly hid his ownership of a seaside luxury apartment. Having made a show of literally standing beside Lula following his initial questioning, Rousseff made an even bigger demonstration of her support for him when she appointed him her chief of staff only days after he had been charged. As a member of the cabinet, Lula, no longer legally subject to prosecution by a federal court, could be tried only by the Supreme Court. Among those who saw the appointment as Rousseff’s attempt to protect Lula from prosecution was a federal judge who both blocked Lula’s appointment and released the transcript of a wiretapped phone conversation between Rousseff and Lula, which, it was argued, indicated that Rousseff was indeed appointing Lula as a precautionary measure for him.

With the outcry for Rousseff’s impeachment swelling in the halls of government and on the streets (according to some estimates, more than a million Brazilians across the country participated in antigovernment demonstrations on March 13), the PT’s principal partner in the ruling coalition, the PMDB, withdrew from the government at the end of March, raising the possibility that it might be followed out by smaller members of the coalition. Those departures increased the likelihood that there would not be enough support left for Rousseff in the Chamber of Deputies to prevent the two-thirds majority required to send the embattled president before the Senate for an impeachment trial. Determined to remain in office, Rousseff characterized the efforts to oust her as a coup. All of this occurred against a backdrop in which hundreds of the members of Brazil’s Congress faced accusations of malfeasance, including the speaker of the Chamber of Deputies, the PMDB’s Eduardo Cunha, who had been formally charged with corruption and money laundering. After three days of intense debate, on the evening of April 17 the 513-seat Chamber of Deputies voted to move forward with the impeachment procedure, with 367 deputies voting for impeachment (significantly more than the 342 votes required).

In early May, as the Senate prepared to vote on whether to proceed with impeachment, events took another dramatic turn. First, the Supreme Court ordered that Cunha be removed as speaker for allegedly having obstructed the investigation into corruption charges against him. Then, on May 9, Cunha’s replacement as speaker, Waldir Maranhão (also under investigation for alleged involvement in the Petrobras scandal), annulled the earlier impeachment vote by the Chamber of Deputies, citing irregularities that had occurred during the session in which the vote was taken. A day later, with senators saying that they would proceed with their vote anyway, Maranhão reversed his decision. In the meantime, Rousseff’s 11th-hour appeal to the Supreme Court to stop the impeachment proceedings also came up empty-handed.

Early in the morning of May 12, 2016, after an all-night debate, the Brazilian Senate voted 55 to 22 to suspend Rousseff and to consider impeachment. Vice Pres. Michel Temer of the PMDB, a former ally of Rousseff, became acting president. On August 10 the Senate voted 59 to 21 to hold an impeachment trial, at the end of which a two-thirds majority vote would be necessary for conviction and permanent removal from office. In the event of conviction, Temer would serve the remainder of Rousseff’s term, ending in January 2019.

The impeachment trial began on August 25. On August 29 Rousseff began her testimony before the Senate with an impassioned statement (called the best speech of her career by some observers) in which she defended her actions regarding the budget, saying that she had done nothing that previous Brazilian presidents had not already done. She also stood by the egalitarian achievements of the Workers’ Party and warned that the administration of Temer—whose cabinet, she noted, had no women or people of colour in it—would limit public spending and defend the interests of the wealthy elite. “I don’t fight for my mandate out of vanity or attachment to power,” Rousseff said. “I fight for democracy, for truth, and for justice. I fight for the people of my country and their well-being.”

Rousseff also responded to questions from senators for l4 hours. The next day, in Rousseff’s absence, the Senate debated her fate into the wee hours of August 31. Later that day the Senate voted 61–20 to remove Rousseff from office. She was also prohibited from running for political office again for eight years. An appeal to the Supreme Court to reverse the decision was seen by most pundits as a futile effort but one intended to put Rousseff’s steadfast defense of her actions into the historical record.

Jeff Wallenfeldt Michael Ray

6 of the First Women to Become Heads of State

How six women became leaders, from Iceland to the Philippines.
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Throughout history, women have often been pushed to the sidelines in politics and kept from power. As of 2016, only 44 of the 196 countries in the world had ever had a woman as head of state. From earning the right to vote in democracies to holding office and becoming national leaders, women have fought their way to the stage in a largely male-dominated global political sphere.

Khertek Anchimaa-Toka

Khertek Anchimaa-Toka served as head of the parliament of the Tuvan People’s Republic, called the Little Khural, from 1940 until 1944, the first ever elected woman head of state in the world. At the age of 18 or 19, Anchimaa, along with 75 other Tuvan youths, was given the opportunity to study in Moscow, where she became one of only 11 of the original 76 to graduate from the Communist University of the Toilers of the East. It was this opportunity to learn Stalinist ideology and to study politics that earned her multiple leadership positions within the Tuvan People’s Revolutionary Party when she returned to her home. As a public servant during this time, she focused efforts on the betterment and education of women in her country. Once elected chairwoman, Anchimaa led Tuva into World War II in 1941 on the side of the Allied powers, largely assisting the Soviet forces. She acted as head of state in Tuva until the country’s inclusion into the Soviet Union by a vote in 1944, afterward becoming deputy chair of the Tuvan executive committee until 1961.

Vigdís Finnbogadóttir

Vigdís Finnbogadóttir was elected president of Iceland in 1980 and was quite the record breaker. Finnbogadóttir’s election made her Iceland’s first woman head of state, and the first woman in the world to be elected president of a country. With a term length of exactly 16 years, she also became the longest-serving woman head of state in any country in history. Finnbogadóttir’s rise to power began, unusually, with a stint as director of the Reykjavík Theatre Company. With a bachelor’s degree in French from the University of Iceland and a teaching degree, Finnbogadóttir earned national popularity as the star of her own educational programming for Iceland State Television. She won her first election in 1980 against three male candidates, triumphing with a focus on education and culture. Finnbogadóttir then went on to serve three more terms as president, running unopposed in 1984 and 1992 and winning with a whopping 92 percent of the vote in 1988. As president, Finnbogadóttir highlighted the importance of retaining and celebrating Iceland’s cultural identity and heritage through language and customs. After serving as president, she founded the Council of Women World Leaders in 1996 and received many awards for her humanitarian work and promotion of cultural values.

Isabel Perón

Isabel Perón served as vice president of Argentina from 1973 to 1974 and then succeeded her husband, Juan Perón, in the position of president after his death. She served as president from 1974 until 1976. She was Argentina’s first woman head of state and the first woman head of state in South America, and she holds the honor of being the first woman president in the world (though she was not elected to the position). Her initial desire to work in show business and dance gave little indication of her future as the leader of her country. But when she met Juan Perón, a famous Argentinian politician, in the mid-1950s, she gave up her career to work alongside him as a secretary, and the decision led to her eventual rise to power. The two married in 1961 and were elected president and vice president of Argentina in 1973. After her husband’s death and her ascent to the presidency, Argentina faced economic instability and political unrest. Perón was encouraged to resign from her position after accusations of corruption in connection to the Argentine Anticommunist Alliance, an illegal organization supposedly led by a close adviser of the Peróns, José López Rega. Perón refused to resign, and so a military coup was staged that left her detained for five years until her eventual exile to Spain. She was charged in 2007 with permitting human rights atrocities carried out by the Argentine Anticommunist Alliance while president, but Spain refused to extradite her for a trial.

Corazon Aquino

Corazon Aquino served as president of the Philippines from 1986 to 1992, the first woman to hold that office. She was also the first female president in Asia. She is known for her revolutionary role in reinstating democratic rule to the Philippines, leading the country away from the authoritarian regime of Ferdinand Marcos. She was born Maria Corazon Cojuangco. She graduated from Mount St. Vincent College in New York City in 1954 and soon after married the politician Benigno Aquino, Jr., following her husband into his political aspirations. After her husband’s assassination in 1983, Corazon Aquino ran in the 1986 presidential election, taking his place as a leading figure in the opposition to Ferdinand Marcos. Though Marcos was reported to have won, Aquino and her party challenged the election results, and she was named the rightful president by the Philippine military. Immediately upon becoming president, Aquino began work to create a new constitution for the country and restored a bicameral Congress. As president she focused on attempts to stabilize the economy and to enforce civil liberties and human rights. Aquino decided not to seek reelection in 1992, attempting to act as a model for future presidents to allow changes in power and to emphasize the democratic will of the people.

Pratibha Patil

Pratibha Patil served as president of India from 2007 to 2012, the first woman to become the country’s head of state. She was also the first woman to serve as governor of an Indian state when, in 2004, she was appointed to the position in the state of Rajasthan. Patil became a member of the political sphere in India in 1962, when she was elected to a position in the Maharashtra legislative assembly at the age of 27. Though a longtime public servant, she was very low-profile during her political life, generating little opposition to her campaign for the presidency. Her time as president, however, was marked with controversy. Patil was reported to have spent more money and to have gone on more foreign trips with her family than any Indian president before her, spending about 2.05 billion INR (about $30 million or £24 million). Her attempt to use government funds and to acquire Indian military land to construct a retirement home for herself was also a controversial decision that faced a large amount of opposition.

Ellen Johnson Sirleaf

Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, president of Liberia from 2006 to 2018, was the first woman elected head of state in the country and the first woman to become a head of state in Africa. Johnson Sirleaf is known for her role in bolstering Liberia’s economic, political, and social landscapes after years of civil war and for earning a Nobel Peace Prize in 2011 for women’s rights work. She received a bachelor’s degree in economics from the University of Colorado Boulder, a bachelor’s degree in accounting from Madison Business College, and a master’s degree in public administration from Harvard. Johnson Sirleaf served as Liberia’s assistant minister of finance under the presidency of William Tolbert until he was overthrown in 1980 and a civil war was instigated. While exiled in Kenya and the United States during the war, Johnson Sirleaf honed her skills as an economist and worked for the World Bank, Citibank, and other organizations. Returning to Liberia once the Second Liberian Civil War had calmed, she put her education and experience as an economist and politician to use by running for president. When she was elected in 2006, she enacted measures that freed Liberia of all its debts and gained international aid for rebuilding the country. She also instituted a Truth and Reconciliation Committee in order to encourage peace and bridge divides within the country following the civil unrest. In 2018 she was awarded the Ibrahim Prize for Achievement in African Leadership.

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Jonathan Hogeback