Alerj president meets Zanin to discuss interim Rio government amid stalled case

The machinery of the Supreme Court controls Rio's political future
Minister Dino's review holds the interim governorship question hostage to an electoral court ruling on former governor Castro.

Em um momento em que o Rio de Janeiro aguarda saber quem de fato governa o estado, o presidente da Assembleia Legislativa, Douglas Ruas, buscou no Supremo Tribunal Federal uma resposta que ainda não chegou. A questão da interinidade — aparentemente simples em sua formulação — revelou-se presa em camadas de revisão judicial e decisões eleitorais pendentes, lembrando que o poder, nas democracias modernas, raramente se transfere em linha reta. O futuro político do estado permanece suspenso, aguardando que dois tribunais distintos se pronunciem antes que qualquer passo possa ser dado.

  • O Rio de Janeiro segue sem um governador efetivo, e a indefinição sobre quem comanda o estado cria uma urgência institucional que nenhuma das partes consegue resolver sozinha.
  • A reunião entre Ruas e o ministro Zanin terminou sem anúncios: os dois legisladores voltaram à capital fluminense de mãos vazias, sem prazo nem resolução.
  • O verdadeiro nó está com o ministro Flávio Dino, que pediu vista do processo e se recusa a devolvê-lo ao julgamento enquanto o TSE não publicar sua decisão sobre o ex-governador Cláudio Castro.
  • Zanin confirmou a dependência em cadeia: sem Dino agir e sem o TSE se manifestar sobre Castro, a assunção interina de Ruas permanece apenas uma possibilidade no papel.
  • O estado assiste, impotente, a um processo em que o ritmo da política local é ditado inteiramente pelo calendário de dois tribunais superiores em Brasília.

Douglas Ruas, recém-empossado presidente da Assembleia Legislativa do Rio de Janeiro, viajou a Brasília na quinta-feira para se reunir com o ministro do Supremo Tribunal Federal Cristiano Zanin. Ao seu lado estava o deputado federal Altineu Côrtes, vice-presidente da Câmara e correligionário. O objetivo era discutir a possibilidade de Ruas assumir o governo do estado em caráter interino — uma demanda formal da Alerj ao STF que, até agora, não encontrou resposta.

A reunião transcorreu em tom cordial, segundo Côrtes, que falou com a imprensa no lugar de Ruas. Mas a cordialidade não produziu avanços concretos. O verdadeiro obstáculo ao processo está nas mãos do ministro Flávio Dino, que pediu vista dos autos e sinalizou que só os devolverá após o Tribunal Superior Eleitoral publicar sua decisão sobre o ex-governador Cláudio Castro — julgamento que ainda não tem data definida. Zanin confirmou essa lógica: o processo só caminha depois que Dino agir e o TSE se pronunciar.

Os dois parlamentares deixaram Brasília na mesma noite sem nenhuma certeza nova. O que trouxeram de volta ao Rio foi apenas a confirmação do que já se suspeitava: o ritmo da sucessão política fluminense está inteiramente nas mãos de ministros em Brasília. Enquanto Dino não devolver o processo e o TSE não julgar Castro, a interinidade de Ruas permanece uma hipótese — e o Rio segue sem uma resposta clara sobre quem, afinal, está no comando.

Douglas Ruas, the newly installed president of Rio de Janeiro's state legislature, sat down with Supreme Court Minister Cristiano Zanin on Thursday evening in Brasília to discuss a question that has become urgent in the state capital: who will actually run Rio while its government remains in limbo.

Ruas arrived at the Supreme Court building with federal deputy Altineu Côrtes, his party colleague and current vice president of the Chamber of Deputies. The Alerj—Rio's legislative assembly—had formally asked the Court to allow Ruas to assume the governorship on an interim basis, a request that now hinges on judicial proceedings that have stalled almost completely. Ruas declined to speak with reporters after the meeting, but Côrtes offered a readout: the conversation with Zanin was cordial, and it centered on the possibility of the assembly president stepping into the governor's role.

The real obstacle, however, sits elsewhere. Minister Flávio Dino has the case in his hands and has requested what's called a "vista"—essentially a hold on proceedings to allow him time to review the matter. Dino has signaled that he will not return the case for judgment until the Superior Electoral Court publishes its ruling on former governor Cláudio Castro, a decision that remains pending. Zanin, according to both legislators, made clear that he shares this view: the process will move forward only after Dino returns his review and the electoral court weighs in on Castro's situation.

The two men left Brasília that same evening, heading back to Rio. They carried no resolution, no timeline, no clarity on when the state's governance question might be settled. What they had instead was confirmation of what already seemed evident—that the machinery of the Supreme Court, and the decisions of one minister in particular, now controls the pace of Rio's political future. Until Dino acts, and until the electoral court rules on Castro, the interim governorship remains theoretical. The state continues without a clear answer to a straightforward question: who is in charge.

The process is with Minister Flávio Dino and awaiting publication of the ruling. He has to return this review for the case to move forward.
— Altineu Côrtes, federal deputy and Chamber vice president
La Conversación del Hearth Otra perspectiva de la historia
Inventor

Why does the electoral court's decision on Castro matter to whether Ruas can become interim governor?

Model

Because Dino has tied them together. He's saying he won't move on the interim governorship question until he sees what the electoral court decides about Castro. It's a way of sequencing the decisions—one feeds into the other.

Inventor

Is Dino blocking the case, or just taking his time?

Model

Technically he's taking his time. He requested a "vista," which is a normal judicial procedure. But the effect is the same: nothing moves until he's ready. And he's made clear he won't be ready until Castro's situation is resolved.

Inventor

What happens to Rio in the meantime?

Model

That's the practical problem. The state needs a functioning executive, but the question of who that is remains stuck in the courts. Ruas wants the job, the legislature asked for him to have it, but the Supreme Court hasn't said yes.

Inventor

Did Zanin give them any hope?

Model

He was cordial, which is something. But he essentially confirmed what Dino already signaled—the process won't advance until Dino returns his review. So no, not really hope. Just a polite confirmation of the waiting game.

Inventor

Why would Dino tie this to Castro's case?

Model

That's the question no one's answering publicly. But it suggests he sees them as connected—perhaps he thinks the electoral court's decision on Castro will affect the legitimacy or viability of whoever takes over as interim governor.

Quieres la nota completa? Lee el original en Metrópoles ↗
Contáctanos FAQ