According to police estimates, a total of 3 million people took to the streets in 200 cities yesterday calling on the president to resign amid widespread anger over corruption investigations and the worst recession in years.
Sometime this week, lower house Speaker Eduardo Cunha, a Rousseff foe, is expected to form a commission to begin impeachment proceedings over allegations of fiscal mismanagement.
He doesn't have any say on the panel's membership, but on Saturday members of his centrist PMDB party pledged to be more independent from Rousseff's administration.
Yet Silva is awaiting a decision by a Sao Paulo judge on whether he will be detained on corruption charges.
Yesterday's protests add to the already-difficult position of Rousseff, who in addition to the impeachment effort is faced with a sprawling investigation by federal prosecutors into corruption at state-run oil giant Petrobras that has moved closer to her inner circle in recent weeks.
The biggest demonstration took place in Brazil's economic capital, Sao Paulo, a bastion of simmering dissatisfaction with Rousseff and the Workers' Party.
The respected Datafolha polling agency estimated about 500,000 people took part in the demonstration, while police estimated turnout at nearly three times that number.
About 1 million people joined the anti-Rousseff demonstration in Rio de Janeiro, organizers estimated.
"There is a situation of ungovernability," said Francisco Fonseca, a political science professor at Pontifical Catholic University in Sao Paulo. "The president has few cards.
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