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Brazil’s next president to struggle with highly fragmented Congress

Front-runner Jair Bolsonaro will be able count on the support of a bolstered conservati­ve bloc but his legislativ­e efforts will still face substantia­l opposition, with vested interests pervading the halls of Congress.

- BY GIULIA PETRONI @GIULIAPETR­ONI

Far-right candidate Jair Bolsonaro came close to an outright victory in Brazil’s presidenti­al election first-round vote earlier this monthand he is inpolepo si ti on to clinch the October 28 run-off against his Workers’ Party (PT) rival Fernando Haddad.

Nine days before the second ballot, polls from Datafolha show the former Army captain is maintainin­g a wide lead over his opponent, with a 58 percent of voter support compared to Haddad’s 42 percent.

Yet Bolsonaro – or Haddad, shouldthee­x-SãoPauloma­yor pull off a shock turnaround – willf acecha ll en ge singo verning,with Con gress more fragmented­t han ever,d es pit et he election of a bolstered bloc of conservati­ve lawmakers. While the Social Liberal Party (PSL) is expected to gain 51 seats in the lower house – a major accomplish­ment for a party that used to have only eight – the total number of deputies is 10 times the new PSL caucus, standing at 513.

“There has never been a Congress as fragmented as the Congress that will be seated in January, 2019,” said Scott Mainwaring, professor of Brazil Studies at the Harvard University’s Kennedy School in an interview with the Times. “And the fragmentat­ion is especially great on the right.”

Whoever is elected will not only in heritwid es pre ad corrup ti onandaf is calstraitj­acket, butwillals oh a ven og over ningcoalit ion topass re- forms. The long history of corruption and patronage inside Brazil’s Congress will require the next president to forge political alliances.

“Some of the conservati­ve politician­s in Brazil will certainly support Bolsonaro’s agenda almost regardless of what it is,” said Mainwaring. “However, a lot of the Brazilian right is deeply clientelis­tic – they do not want an efficient state.”

CENTRÃO

Indispensa­ble to ensure the congressio­nal support is Cen

trão, or “big centre,” a group of mid-size parties representi­ng the real concept of establishm­ent – conservati­ve forces dating back to the Constituti­onal Assembly of 1986-1988.

Today, the “big centre” includes the Democrats party (DEM), the Progressiv­e party (PP), the Brazilian Republican Party (PRB), and the Humanist Party of Solidarity (PHS).

“Accompl is hing de e pre form will be challengin­g for Bolsonaro as it has been for every president in Brazil since 1985,” said Mainwaring. “[Yet] the biggest challenge for him will be articulati­ng a coherent vision. He hasn’t really articulate­d one so far.”

A good starting point for an eventual Bolsonaro coalition will be the so-called “Bible, beef and bullets” – BBB – caucus, which groups evangelica­l Christians, the farm lobby and lawmakers determined to ease strict firearms controls.

“Evangelica­ls have become a huge force in Brazil’s politics,” said Gustavo Ribeiro, founder of The Brazilian Re- port news website told the Times. “They are present where the state is not – creating a sense of community even in the most peripheral areas.”

With 199 seats in Congress, the Evangelica­l Christian caucus is naturally aligned with the far-right candidate’s presidency for his ultra-conservati­ve stances on family, abortion, LGBTQ rights and drugs.

Bolsonaro’s promise to ease restric ti veg un lawsand reduce crime in rural areas also won him the support of the Parliament­ary Agricultur­al Front (FPA), the country’s powerful agrobusine­ss sector accounting for more than a third of the lowerhou sean daquartero­f the Senate seats.

Conservati­ve landowners also see an opportunit­y to roll back environmen­tal regulation­s, as Bolsonaro has long supported the idea of opening up indigenous areas to agricultur­al and commercial use and says he would merge the Farm and Environmen­t ministries, said Ribeiro.

Brazil currently has 28 political parties represente­d in Congress, and it will soon count 30. As a consequenc­e of the electorate’s growing demand for political reform, the legislativ­e body will also mark the highest turnover rate in the history of the country. According to the Wilson Center’s Brazil Institute, there’s been a 51-percent turnover rate in the lower house – with the number of female deputies rising from 10 to 15 perc en t–andashifto­f 85 percent in the Senate, with 46 of the 54 seats occupied by new members.

 ??  ?? AP/ ERALDO PERES Supporters of Jair Bolsonaro rally in front of the headquarte­rs of the national Congress in Brasilia.
AP/ ERALDO PERES Supporters of Jair Bolsonaro rally in front of the headquarte­rs of the national Congress in Brasilia.

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