E agora, TRE?

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Former Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff  speaks during a campaign rally to launch Lula's presidential candidacy for the upcoming October elections, at the Workers Central Union (CUT) headquarters in Sao Paulo, Brazil on January 25, 2018.
A Brazilian appeals court Wednesday upheld ex-president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva's conviction for corruption, dealing a body blow to his hopes of running for re-election this year. The three-judge panel sitting in the southern city of Porto Alegre unanimously ruled that his original 9.5-year jail sentence be extended to more than 12 years. Lula was defiant, telling he intends to run for the presidency despite the court setback.
 / AFP PHOTO / Nelson Almeida
Former Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff speaks during a campaign rally to launch Lula's presidential candidacy for the upcoming October elections, at the Workers Central Union (CUT) headquarters in Sao Paulo, Brazil on January 25, 2018. A Brazilian appeals court Wednesday upheld ex-president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva's conviction for corruption, dealing a body blow to his hopes of running for re-election this year. The three-judge panel sitting in the southern city of Porto Alegre unanimously ruled that his original 9.5-year jail sentence be extended to more than 12 years. Lula was defiant, telling he intends to run for the presidency despite the court setback. / AFP PHOTO / Nelson Almeida -

A Procuradoria Eleitoral do TRE de Minas pode pegar um pepino caso provocada. Dilma Rousseff ganhou direito pol�tico sob liminar do ministro Ricardo Lewandowski, do STF, na sess�o do Congresso que a cassou. A mudan�a de domic�lio de Porto Alegre para Belo Horizonte pode ser questionada.

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