Brazilian President Temer survives parliamentary commission vote

Xinhua News Agency

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The Commission on Constitution, Justice and Citizenship (CCJ) of

Brazil's Chamber of Deputies voted on Thursday to reject the corruption

charges against President Michel Temer by 40 votes to 25.

In this way, the CCJ advises the full Chamber of Deputies to vote

against the report elaborated by deputy Sergio Zveiter, which

recommended accepting the charges.

This result was expected as, in recent days, the government succeeded

in changing a number of CCJ members who had threatened to vote against

the president.

Ahead of these changes, Temer was set to lose a CCJ vote by 32 to 30, according to estimations by Brazilian media.

Before the vote on Thursday, Zveiter said the government had used

public money to try and save its mandate, which consisted "obstruction

of justice."

However, this vote is a non-binding, advisory motion for the full

Chamber of Deputies which must now vote on whether to accept the

corruption charges against Temer.

Prosecutor-general Rodrigo Janot filed charges against Temer at the

Supreme Court, accusing the president of accepting bribes from

meatpacking group JBS since 2010.

If the Chamber of Deputies and the Supreme Court both accept the

charges, Temer will step down from office for 180 days and face trial.

This would be the first time that a sitting president has been charged before the Supreme Court.