during his inauguration in the
National Congress, 31 August 2016|left On 31 August 2016, the Senate voted to convict Rousseff, thereby removing her from office and making Temer President of Brazil. He would serve out the balance of Rousseff's second term, which finished on 31 December 2018. The vice-president position then became vacant, with the
President of the Chamber of Deputies (at the time
Rodrigo Maia) acting as the first constitutional substitute during his term. In October 2016, the
Constitution of Brazil was amended by deputies to cap public spending, effectively frozen for twenty years, adjusted for inflation only. This measure was the subject of both praise and criticism among the Brazilian middle-class. In November 2016,
Marcelo Calero, Temer's former
Minister of Culture, resigned, stating that Temer had pressured him to help an ally, government secretary
Geddel Vieira Lima, who had invested in a development that was being delayed by a heritage preservation measure by allowing construction to go ahead in spite of said measure. Vieira Lima resigned on 25 November 2016, and opposition leaders stated that they would seek President Temer's impeachment over this incident. Temer denied the corruption allegations but admitted talking to Calero about the project. leaders in
Hangzhou, China, 3 September 2016. Left to right: Temer,
Modi,
Xi,
Putin and
Zuma In December 2016,
Marcelo Odebrecht confirmed paying bribes to President Temer. In March 2017, Temer decided to move to the
vice presidential residence again. He had recent problems with the Brazilian Historical Heritage Institute due to the architectural changes he made to the
Presidential Palace. In an interview to the Brazilian news magazine
Veja he mentioned he could not sleep in the "ample rooms" and questioned the possibility of ghosts. On 28 April 2017,
trade unions called for a
general strike against the pension and labor reforms proposed in his government, which saw shutdowns of various public services in state capitals and major cities. The government announces the abolition of "popular pharmacies" for the summer of 2017. Created in 2004 under the presidency of
Lula, they allowed the most disadvantaged to obtain low-cost medicines. On 16 February 2018, Temer
signed a law aimed at tackling the organised crime element in Rio de Janeiro, transferring full control of security to the military. The military will reportedly remain in control of security until 1 January 2019. The next day, Temer suggested establishing a Ministry of Public Security in the near future. According to data from the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics, extreme poverty increased by 11 per cent in 2017, while inequalities also increased again (the Gini index rose from 0.555 to 0.567). The reduction in the number of Bolsa Família beneficiaries decided by the government is the main cause, according to the study.
Second impeachment attempt On 17 May 2017, secretly taped recordings leaked by
O Globo, a leading national newspaper, reveal the President discussing hush money pay-offs with
Joesley Batista, the businessman who runs the country's biggest meat-packing firm
JBS, prompting talk of trying again to impeach him. On Wednesday 24 May 2017, while thousands of angry demonstrators marched towards Congress demanding Temer's resignation and immediate direct presidential elections, Temer sought to suppress a revolt within his own party. at the
Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow, 20 June 2017 Overwhelmed by protests, Temer deployed federal troops to the capital. Many photographs and testimonials taken during the protest show police violence, and officers shooting at demonstrators during the demonstration. On 9 June 2017, the Brazilian
Superior Electoral Court voted 4–3 to acquit Temer and Rousseff of alleged illegal campaign funding in the 2014 election, thus allowing him to stay in office. Former
Odebrecht Vice President Marcio Faria da Silva said in testimony given as part of a plea bargain that Temer asked him at a meeting to arrange a $40 million payment to Temer's party, the Brazilian Democratic Movement Party (PMDB). Faria said he met with Temer at his law office, and that speaker of the lower house
Eduardo Cunha and Congressman
Henrique Eduardo Alves were also present. The payment represented a 5% commission on a contract Odebrecht was seeking with the state-run oil company Petrobras, Faria said. Supreme Court Justice Luiz Edson Fachin made this and other testimony public, and ordered an investigation of more than 100 politicians implicated in bribes and kickbacks at state-run companies, particularly Petrobras.
Criminal charges during the
12th G20 summit in Germany, 8 July 2017 On 26 June 2017, Temer was charged by Prosecutor-General
Rodrigo Janot with accepting bribes and Janot delivered the charges to the
Supreme Federal Court. The lower house was required to vote on the charges, which stemmed from allegations that he took $5 million in return for clearing up JBS tax problems and facilitating a loan. At the time, Temer still had the support of speaker of the lower house
Rodrigo Maia, who possessed the power to accept or shelve a petition for impeachment. The
Federal Police (PF), who were forced by funding restrictions to disband before all investigations into the matter were complete, had recommended that Temer also be charged with obstruction of justice.
Torquato Jardim, who was Temer's third Justice Minister in 2017, had unsuccessfully attempted to change the leadership of the PF, and to implement a series of legislative initiatives focused on amnesty and changes to the code of criminal procedure. In June 2017 Temer's approval rating stood at 7%, the lowest for any President of Brazil in more than thirty years. On 2 August, lawmakers in the lower house in Congress voted not to refer the case against the scandal-plagued President to the supreme court, which had the power to try him. Observers stated that the move to shield Temer further undermined the credibility of Brazil's political and electoral system. On 21 March 2019, Temer was arrested during the investigation into
Operation Car Wash. On March 25, a
habeas corpus was issued on behalf of Temer by
desembargador Antonio Ivan Athié.
Amazon rainforest decree On 22 August 2017, Temer issued a decree to dissolve the "Reserva Nacional do Cobre e Associados" (Renca)
Amazonian reserve in Brazil's northern states of
Pará and
Amapá, measuring 4 million hectares to allow mining by private companies and the conversion of forest into crops for agro-business companies. After widespread criticism, the decree was revoked on 26 September.
Foreign visits as president in
Moscow, June 2017 ==Polls==