São Paulo council votes on Casares impeachment this Friday

The São Paulo Deliberative Council meets this Friday to vote on impeaching president Julio Casares, weakened by financial misconduct suspicions and loss of allied support. The hybrid session, court-approved, requires 75% quorum and two-thirds votes for removal. Police probe into suspicious club transactions has escalated the crisis.

The São Paulo Deliberative Council begins voting this Friday (16) at 6:30 p.m. on the impeachment of Julio Casares, club president since 2021. A ruling from the 3rd Civil Court of Butantã, by Judge Luciane Cristina Silva Tavares, allowed the hybrid format with in-person attendance at the Morumbi Noble Hall and online participation, overriding the management's initial preference for in-person only. The club's appeal was denied by the 1st Private Law Chamber of the TJ-SP, under Judge Mônica Rodrigues Dias de Carvalho.

Of 254 eligible councilors, 191 are needed for minimum quorum (75%) and 171 favorable votes (two-thirds) to remove Casares immediately. The opposition, initially pessimistic, gained momentum from the defection of four groups from the ruling coalition: Legião, Vanguarda, Sempre Tricolor, and Participação, Casares' own slate. These groups estimate 128 pro-impeachment votes, plus opposition, totaling at least 182.

Vice-president Harry Massis Junior, 80, a lifelong councilor and member since 1964, pledged support for removal and would assume the role if approved. A businessman owning Hotel Massis in São Paulo, he marks a major betrayal. Casares now relies only on Força São Paulo and Movimento São Paulo, totaling 67 councilors.

The crisis intensified with a Police Civil investigation at DPPC, under secrecy, into R$1.5 million received in cash and 35 withdrawals totaling R$11 million from club accounts, per Coaf report. The Public Security Secretariat stated: "The investigations are ongoing at DPPC, which is why details are preserved to ensure police autonomy".

Casares' lawyers, Daniel Bialski and Bruno Borragine, asserted: the transactions "have a licit and legitimate origin, compatible with the evolution of the executive's financial capacity," from prior high-paying corporate roles. Earlier, audios exposed an alleged illegal ticket sales scheme for the presidential box at Morumbi during concerts. The advisory council of former presidents initially opposed impeachment, but police revelations shifted support in recent days.

If passed, an assembly of about 50,000 members will be called within 30 days for ratification by simple majority.

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Dramatic courtroom scene of TSE judges voting 4-1 to bar former Rio governor Cláudio Castro from office amid election abuse symbols.
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TSE forms majority to bar Cláudio Castro from running for office

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Brazil's Superior Electoral Court (TSE) formed a majority on Tuesday, March 24, 2026, to condemn Rio de Janeiro's former governor Cláudio Castro (PL) for political and economic power abuse in the 2022 elections, barring him from office until 2030. The 4-1 vote jeopardizes his Senate pre-candidacy.

The São Paulo Deliberative Council approved the impeachment of president Julio Casares on Friday (16), removing him from office with 188 votes against, amid scandals involving financial irregularities and misuse of Morumbi suites. The decision comes as Civil Police investigate alleged embezzlement at the club. Harry Massis Junior assumes the presidency on an interim basis.

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The São Paulo Advisory Council met on Tuesday (6) and opposed opening an impeachment process against president Julio Casares. The body, composed of former presidents and councilors, deemed the accusations lacking material evidence against the executive. The final decision rests with the Deliberative Council, which has until February 6 to deliberate.

Congress leadership indicated it may schedule a session in early March to review Lula's veto on the PL da Dosimetria, which reduces sentences for those convicted of coup attempts, provided pressure for a CPI on Banco Master eases. The measure would benefit former President Jair Bolsonaro by shortening his closed-regime time. Leaders seek an agreement with the opposition to avoid reading CPI requests.

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The absence of Chamber President Hugo Motta and Senate President Davi Alcolumbre from the Income Tax exemption sanction event on November 26 signals an escalating crisis between Congress and Lula's government. This tension threatens key agendas like the 2026 Budget and Jorge Messias's STF nomination. Jair Bolsonaro's imprisonment takes a backseat, with mild reactions from the right.

In the early hours of December 10, 2025, Brazil's Chamber of Deputies approved the Dosimetry Bill by 291 to 148 votes, reducing sentences for those convicted in the January 8, 2023 coup plot, benefiting former President Jair Bolsonaro. The session was chaotic, including the six-month suspension of Deputy Glauber Braga's mandate instead of expulsion. The bill now heads to the Senate, where the government seeks to delay it.

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In a key step for President Claudia Sheinbaum's electoral reform—initially unveiled February 25 and formally presented March 4 as the 'decálogo por la democracia' (see prior coverage)—the Chamber of Deputies' Constitutional Points and Political-Electoral Reform committees approved the proposal on March 10, 2026, by 45-39 votes. It heads to plenary discussion, likely March 11, amid PVEM and PT opposition despite their Morena alliance.

 

 

 

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