Brazilian clown secures congress seat after literacy test

There is no part of this that isn't great.

A television clown elected to Brazil's congress can take up his lawmaker duties after barely passing a literacy test, the judge overseeing the exam said Wednesday.

Francisco Oliveira, a 45-year-old comic better known by his stage name Tiririca, demonstrated "a minimum of intellect concerning the content (of a text) despite difficulties in writing," the Sao Paulo regional electoral court judge, Aloisio Sergio Rezende Silveira, said.

That result sufficiently disproved critics who had claimed Oliveira could neither read nor write as required of a member of congress under Brazil's constitution, according to the judge.

"The electoral court considers someone to be ineligible only if they are totally illiterate," he said in an official statement.

Oliveira was elected as a Sao Paulo federal representative in October 3 legislative polls with 1.3 million ballots -- the most of any of candidate across the country.

He ran a humorous television campaign dressed as a clown with a blond wig and colorful costume, and spouting riffs like "What does a federal deputy do? I have no idea -- but vote for me and I'll let you know."

Detractors, including several longtime lawmakers, said Oliveira was bringing Brazil's congress -- known for its many corruption scandals -- into disrepute, and challenged his candidacy on literacy grounds.

President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, a former shoeshine boy and metalworker, called the demand for the test an "idiocy" disrespecting those who voted for Oliveira.

He added: "Tiririca is the face of society."

Previously.

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6 Responses:

  1. I imagine that Paulo Freire might have appreciated this...

  2. L. says:

    And did you vote for Sarah Palin, your local television clown?

  3. Travis Gyger says:

    Word Lens is one of those concepts that I would have scoffed at if I read it in sci-fi a few years ago. Now it's real. questvisual.com

  4. 205guy says:

    Just saw Idiocracy over the weekend. Now I notice the decline everywhere I look (though maybe I'm giving too much credit to the past and present to call it a decline).

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