The Latin American Report # 596

@limonta · 2025-09-11 21:04 · Deep Dives

Brazil's Supreme Court forms majority to convict Bolsonaro for coup attempt

In a developing breaking news story, the First Chamber of Brazil's Supreme Court has formed a majority to convict former President Jair Bolsonaro for an alleged attempt to derail the return to the Planalto Palace of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, who defeated him in a tight but fair election in 2022. Judge Cármen Lúcia Antunes stated that there is "conclusive evidence" that the far-right leader sought to "undermine the free exercise" of democratic powers in the South American giant through a "criminal organization" under his supervision. This "criminal organization" refers to a group of officials and high-ranking military officers from his administration.

With one judge still pending to cast his vote—now largely irrelevant—, the next key step is awaiting the sentencing in the case, whose rapporteur is the controversial judge Alexandre de Moraes, who has positioned himself as a staunch defender of democratic institutions. Eventually, the legal battle—which Trump placed at the center of bilateral relations in favor of Bolsonaro—will be assessed by the full Supreme Court.

BREAKING 👇

Argentina

Despite experiencing his worst political moment, Javier Milei is not backing down one millimeter from his policy of cuts and fiscal deficit monitoring. The Argentine leader has vetoed legislation that would have benefited the country's public universities—a symbol for much of the citizenry, including segments of the middle class. The rectors of these university institutions have warned that all are in a "critical state" and called for a national strike in rejection of the executive action.

"The operation of public universities as we know them is at risk if we do not have a public funding law and a 2026 budget," said Oscar Alpa, rector of the National University of La Pampa and vice president of the National Interuniversity Council. Milei, who has already lost influence in Congress due to his controversial political management, will try to defend his veto next week, when further protests are scheduled.

Source

In a similar battle, workers at the Garrahan Hospital, Argentina's main pediatric health center, are also going on strike after the head of the Pink House vetoed legislation declaring a public emergency in pediatric care.

Regional news brief

Many Cubans were still without electricity, following the latest nationwide blackout reported on Wednesday morning. The "unexpected" shutdown of a critical thermoelectric plant caused a total disconnection of the national power grid, which was resynchronized early this afternoon. However, the normality people are returning to is not one of continuous service, but one of persistent blackouts due to the chronic deficit in generation capacity to meet energy demand.

Source

Via X

We continue to monitor Trump's immigration policy 👇

A concerning development in Dominican Republican 👇

This is all for today’s report.

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