Brazil’s president-in-waiting Michel Temer, no longer merely ‘decorative’

When Brazil’s Vice-President Michel Temer complained to embattled President Dilma Rousseff that he didn’t like being a “decorative” figure, he was being serious. Now he could be about to take her job.
Temer and Rousseff always made an awkward couple. As head of the PMDB centrist party, Temer represented the biggest force in leftist Rousseff’s shaky coalition.
For years, the PMDB has played that kingmaker role and it worked. But on Tuesday, the party voted to quit the government and go into opposition, supporting an ever stronger push to impeach Rousseff.
And if she is removed from office, the outwardly dour Temer becomes interim president.
The 75-year-old lawyer has a low profile for someone in such a lynchpin position at the top of Latin America’s biggest country and economy.