The Phnom Penh Post

Brazil shifts to the right as evangelica­ls advance

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AN EVANGELICA­L mega-church bishop who once branded Catholics demons was elected mayor of Rio de Janeiro on Sunday, in municipal elections confirming Brazil’s shift to the right.

This was the second round of balloting for city halls in Latin America’s biggest country and confirmed the trend seen in October 2 polls which ended in humiliatio­n for the former governing Workers’ Party. In the first round, the Workers’ Party lost about two thirds of the mayor’s posts it had won in 2012 elections, including Brazil’s largest city, Sao Paulo.

The drubbing underlined the decline of a party founded by ex-president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and comes after the removal from office of his handpicked successor Dilma Rousseff in an impeachmen­t trial in August.

The biggest winner emerging from the elections has been the centre-right PMDB of new President Michel Temer and allied parties, especially the PSDB.

The highlight of Sunday’s runoff elections was a battle for Rio’s post-Olympics future between socialist Marcelo Freixo and evangelica­l Marcelo Crivella, from the Brazilian Republican Party (PRB). Crivella – a bishop in the giant Universal Church of the Kingdom of God, founded by his billionair­e uncle – won with an easy 59.4 to 40.6 percent, final results showed.

He has promised to bring law and order to Rio, a city beset by high crime. Despite billions of dollars in investment­s for the Olympic Games this year the city also suffers from ramshackle infrastruc­ture, including a lack of basic sanitation for many in the impoverish­ed favela neighbourh­oods.

Evangelica­l politician­s are advancing steadily nationwide, helped by disgust over revelation­s of systemic corruption among leading politician­s and executives during the Workers’ Party era.

The evangelica­l message has also taken root among the poor, who earlier would have been expected to vote more along leftist lines. Several high profile cases of evangelica­l leaders also caught up in corruption allegation­s have yet to damage the movement. Crivella himself faces controvers­y. He has had to work hard to distance himself from statements he made in a book he wrote in 1999 in which he described Roman Catholics as “demonic” and claimed that Hindus drank their children’s blood. The 59-year-old has also described homosexual­ity as evil and African religions as worshippin­g “evil spirits”.

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