The political sins of Dilma.
Written by Samuel de Jesus on 12/07/2013

Looking Dilma and reading Max Weber cence AND POLICY, two vocations, we conclude that the policy requires rationality, since in practice the power is constituted through submission to the charisma of the leader. The moment Dilma does not arise as a leader or demagogue shows no vocation demagogic, his government starts paying a price. After all, politics has its intricacies and one of them is the faith that the people deposited in the conductor, in this case, conductive, one who is the head of government. Charisma is one of the pillars of modern politics, for example, Queen Elizabeth I of England to be proclaimed the virgin queen, claimed that she was married to the state. His pale image indicating metaphorically, the absence of blood in his veins denoted representatively coldness necessary to conduct the destinies of England, but it just was not enough. His reign met the conditions for that England ceased to be a poor country and become an empire where the sun never set.
Besides charisma Weber says there are other aspects to maintaining obedience among them obedience founded on material reward and social prestige, and this is only possible through state-largest administrative and also management of the material means that a state has. In this regard it must be said that the alliances that led Dilma to power are now affecting their governance, especially the composition with the hungry PMDB, the largest party of physiological Brazilian Republic. His appetite is being able to generate large Weberian disobedience to the government. The failure of the referendum by the Congress is in practice this disobedience, especially an opposition parliamentary leaving the government without support. The trend, if nothing is done, is that the government becomes increasingly isolated, until we came to an institutional crisis. This is the bet of the PSDB and its political aggregates. Currently part considerable allied base is starting to find a good deal of opposition to the government.
The assessment that there should be a reshuffle is correct and very urgent. This means that there should be a renegotiation that attracted groups emerging on the political scene that need inserting government to keep or even expand their power. The alliance with the PT PSB Governor Eduardo Campos becomes crucial at this time. Without a new political pact will be very difficult to maintain the PT in power, because even if Dilma leave the scene and get Lula, the charisma of the former president will not be enough for his victory at last will lack the means for redistribution of materials to gluttons Brazilian politics.
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