Tens of thousands of demonstrators marched yesterday to Congress to protest economic reforms that President Michel Temer is pushing through and to demand he step down amid a corruption scandal.
Small scuffles between police and protesters who tried to jump a cordon mushroomed into a series of clashes in which officers fired tear gas and pepper spray to contain the crowd.
Protesters set fires and used portable toilets as barricades.
In a brief national address during the unrest, Defence Minister Raul Jungmann said troops were being sent to guard federal buildings, including the presidential palace. The week-long deployment was authorised by a presidential decree which left open the possibility that soldiers could be used more widely in Brasilia. The decree said Jungmann would decide the scope.
"This mess, this mayhem is unacceptable," Jungmann said. "President Temer will not allow that."
Jungmann added that soldiers had already entered the Foreign Ministry, and televised images showed troops outside the presidential palace.
His unusual decision to call in the military could heighten anger against the government if it is seen as the last gasp of a president trying to maintain his hold on power.
"This decree was never used in this context to protect an administration that is politically isolated," said Newton de Oliveira, a professor and security specialist at Mackenzie University in Rio de Janeiro. He said he thought the supreme court might be called on to evaluate whether the move was constitutional.
Now, with the latest allegations against Temer himself, many Brazilians have had enough.
In the wake of the announcement on the use of the military, senior officials began distancing themselves from the decision.
"If this government cannot hold itself up, the armed forces will not hold up this government," said Senator Renan Calheiros, who is the whip for Temer's party in the upper house but has increasingly challenged the president.
Maia also said he hoped the president would limit his decree to last only yesterday and called the move "an excess."
Senator Romero Juca, a Temer ally, defended the president's decision, saying: "President Temer brought in the armed forces because a bunch of criminals were setting ministries on fire."
The pressure on Temer to resign continued to ratchet up yesterday. Federal police asked the president to submit to questioning, his defence team said in a statement, calling the request inappropriate.
With Brazil deeply divided and a political crisis deepening, a session of the lower house of Congress became chaotic, with opposition politicians surrounding the speaker's desk in protest and holding signs saying Congress' workings should be transparent. The Senate's session also descended into chaos.
Several lawmakers have submitted requests for Temer's impeachment to the speaker and Maia has angered them by saying he would take his time to review the requests.
Maia eventually called an end to the session. While Congress debated, 35,000 people were marching toward the chamber down a long avenue lined with the main government buildings, including the Supreme Court, the presidential palace and the ministries.
Protesters shouted "Out with Temer!" and carried signs calling for immediate direct presidential elections.
If Temer resigned, the Constitution says Congress would elect the next president, who would hold power for the rest of his term, which runs to the end of 2018. But many Brazilians, disgusted with the political class, want to vote themselves.
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