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			 Pro-government demonstrators took to the streets in several states 
			amid fears of violence as the debate began. Major trade unions and 
			landless peasant movements planned bigger, nationwide protests on 
			Sunday, when the debate is set to culminate with a vote that 
			Rousseff is widely expected to lose. 
 The government lost a last-ditch appeal on Thursday before the 
			Supreme Court to halt the impeachment process, which could bring 
			further instability or even chaos to Latin America's largest economy 
			after 13 years of rule by the leftist Workers' Party.
 
 Rousseff is accused of manipulating budget accounts in 2014 to 
			secure her re-election.
 
 She has strongly rejected the accusation and planned to appeal to 
			Brazilians in a televised speech on Friday night. But the 
			increasingly isolated leader canceled the broadcast after an 
			opposition party sought a court injunction to block it, arguing that 
			she was unfairly using resources of the Brazilian state to defend 
			herself.
 
			
			 Rousseff is fighting to survive a political storm fueled by Brazil's 
			worst recession since the Great Depression in the 1930s and a 
			spiraling corruption scandal that has reached her inner circle.
 In a further blow for the president, Minister for Cities Gilberto 
			Kassab resigned his post late on Friday, according to two sources 
			familiar with matter. His Brazil Social Democratic Party (PSD) split 
			from the government on Wednesday and said it would vote for 
			Rousseff's impeachment.
 
 Police stepped up security in the Brazilian capital where a 
			half-mile-long (1 km) metal fence has been erected on the grass 
			esplanade opposite Congress to avoid clashes between rival 
			demonstrators expected to turn out by the tens of thousands over the 
			weekend.
 
 In Rio de Janeiro, police said they plan to form a cordon on the 
			Copacabana beachfront avenue to separate the pro-impeachment crowd 
			from Rousseff supporters.
 
 "I am very worried that there will be violence, depending on the 
			result of the vote and the number of people who gather in Brasilia," 
			said Congressman Rogerio Rosso, who chaired the lower house 
			committee that backed Rousseff's impeachment.
 
 The country's top network TV Globo plans to broadcast Sunday's 
			critical roll-call vote from beginning to end, starting at 2 p.m. 
			(1700 GMT), which analysts said will add pressure on lawmakers to 
			vote for impeachment.
 
 Polls show that roughly two-thirds of Brazilians support 
			impeachment.
 
			
			 "VIOLENT ACT"
 As opposition congressmen called for Rousseff's ouster, Attorney 
			General José Eduardo Cardozo addressed Congress in her defense, 
			calling the impeachment process a "violent act with no parallel 
			against democracy."
 
 "History will never forgive those who broke with democracy," Cardozo 
			said, as ruling lawmakers shouted: "There won't be a coup."
 
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			While the budget violations alleged against Rousseff are serious, 
			she has not been directly implicated in the kickback scandal 
			engulfing state-run oil company Petrobras, though her opponents say 
			that bribe money was used to fund her election campaigns. 
			The move to impeach her, after months of political deadlock, is 
			widely seen as a vote of no-confidence in a leader blamed for 
			turning once-booming Brazil into the worst performer among the 
			world's major economies.
 Support for unseating Rousseff has gained momentum in recent weeks, 
			with the defection of parties from her ruling coalition.
 
 Nineteen of the 25 parties with seats in the lower house now back 
			impeachment, the Brasilia-based consultancy Arko Advice said on 
			Friday. They will deliver at least 350 votes and maybe 370, 
			exceeding the two-thirds majority in the 513-seat house needed to 
			send impeachment to the Senate, it said.
 
 Former Justice Minister Miguel Reale Jr., a leading supporter of 
			impeachment, opened Friday's debate by saying the process to oust 
			Rousseff reflected the will of the people. "She was extremely 
			irresponsible and knocked out the country," he said.
 
 If her impeachment is approved by the lower house, the Senate must 
			then vote on whether to go ahead with putting Rousseff on trial for 
			disobeying budget laws.
 
			
			 
			If the Senate approved a trial, in a vote that would likely take 
			place on May 11, Rousseff would automatically be suspended and 
			replaced by Vice President Michel Temer. 
			Temer, who would serve out Rousseff's term until 2018 if she is 
			ousted by the Senate, has little popular support. He would face a 
			daunting task restoring confidence in a country where dozens of 
			political leaders, including his close associates, are under 
			investigation for corruption.
 Temer is considering the chairman of Goldman Sachs in Brazil, Paulo 
			Leme, and the founder of asset manager Maua Capital, Luiz Fernando 
			Figueiredo, as candidates to join his economic team should he take 
			over the presidency in coming weeks, two people familiar with the 
			matter told Reuters on Friday.
 
 (Writing by Daniel Flynn and Anthony Boadle; Editing by W Simon and 
			Tom Brown)
 
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