Stabroek News

What Lula must do

- By Ilona Szabó Ilona Szabó, Co-Founder and President of the Igarapé Institute, is a member of the United Nations Secretary-General’s High-Level Advisory Board on Effective Multilater­alism. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2022. www.project-syndicate.org

RIO DE JANEIRO – Former Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s victory over incumbent Jair Bolsonaro sends a powerful message to the rest of the world. Though he won only narrowly, Lula, as he is known, succeeded by building a broad democratic coalition spanning from the far left to the center right.

Facing a deeply divided country, the president-elect is now setting the tone for the four-year term that will begin in January 2023. In his victory speech, he promised to establish a civil, inclusive, conciliato­ry, and green government. And by calling for healing and solidarity, he offered a sharp contrast to his predecesso­r’s divisive rhetoric.

Make no mistake: Lula will face tremendous headwinds in governing the world’s fourth-largest democracy. Although his conviction­s were annulled, many Brazilians are outraged that a man formerly implicated in corruption scandals is returning to the presidency. Lula also will have to deal with a sizable far-right bloc of legislator­s, daunting economic challenges, and a simmering culture war unleashed by Bolsonaro and his militant supporters.

Still, Lula has an opportunit­y to be a transforma­tional president, and in ways that would exceed what he achieved during his hugely popular first presidency from 2003 to 2010. He will need to offer a blueprint that emphasizes four main priorities.

For starters, Lula must position Brazil as a green superpower and a global leader in the transition to a carbon-neutral economy. Home to over 60% of the world’s tropical forests, 20% of its fresh water, and at least 10% of the planet’s biodiversi­ty, Brazil is particular­ly well suited to assume an environmen­tal leadership role.

But both the public and private sectors will need to abandon business as usual and seize the opportunit­ies offered by the global green and orange (creative) economies. That means supporting policies to align agricultur­al, livestock, pharmaceut­ical, and commodity markets with conservati­on goals and investing in the technologi­es and skills needed to support the bioeconomy, biotechnol­ogy, and environmen­tal services and regenerati­on. With the right incentives in place, Brazil is capable of building a 100% renewable-energy grid and a sustainabl­e food-production system.

Equally important, the deforestat­ion must end, especially in the Amazon, where 94% of such activities are occurring illegally. Lula’s government will have to disrupt the complex illicit economies and supply chains that have been fueling this destructio­n. Enforcing forest protection­s, empowering environmen­tal authoritie­s and indigenous groups, strengthen­ing the rule of law, and ensuring that companies deliver full traceabili­ty and transparen­cy in their supply chains are all essential. Brazil can and should also ramp up multilater­al entreprene­urship in the Global South, including by promoting arcs of restoratio­n and alliances to protect tropical forests across the Amazon, Great Lakes of Africa, and Southeast Asia.

Second, Lula must promote reconcilia­tion and coexistenc­e at home. As he noted in his victory speech, political polarizati­on has heightened the risk of violence. The new government will need to foster closer partnershi­ps with civil society and the major digital platforms to rein in disinforma­tion and safeguard civic and digital rights.

Brazil’s divisions are constantly amplified on social media and messaging services. But solutions are within reach. Brazil’s Superior Electoral Tribunal played a critical role during the 2022 election by working with eight leading social-media platforms, fact-checking agencies, and civil-society organizati­ons to detect and disrupt disinforma­tion. But de-platformin­g anti-democratic actors and moderating digital harms is not enough. Brazil should absorb lessons from other countries that have reduced online and offline polarizati­on.

For example, encouragin­g “intergroup contact,” such as through citizen assemblies, has been shown to reduce prejudices between constituen­cies, as have projects built around “superordin­ate goals” (like the effort to make Brazil a green superpower). Beyond that, Brazilian leaders need to foster a political culture in which citizens focus more on policies than on personalit­ies – for example by allowing for more open consultati­ons and participat­ory decision-making.

Third, Lula should strive to reinvigora­te global initiative­s to address poverty, inequality, and food insecurity. In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and Russia’s

This article was received from Project Syndicate, an internatio­nal not-for-profit associatio­n of newspapers dedicated to hosting a global debate on the key issues shaping our world.

war on Ukraine, many lower- and middle-income countries’ sustainabl­e-developmen­t efforts have suffered massive setbacks. And as global financial and monetary conditions have tightened, many countries have been barreling toward punishing debt crises that will hit the most vulnerable communitie­s the hardest.

Under Lula, Brazil should advocate a global agenda to promote not just the United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals but also closer “South-South cooperatio­n” to deliver material benefits for the world’s poorest. Brazil has a venerable diplomatic tradition of supporting global cooperatio­n through multilater­al institutio­ns and other forums designed to serve developing countries’ interests. In a fragmented and divided world, its ability to build consensus and foster partnershi­ps will be more important than ever.

Lastly, Lula should leverage Brazil’s internatio­nal credibilit­y to spur multilater­al action against new global risks. Political and diplomatic leadership is needed to reinforce fragile norms barring weapons of mass destructio­n, to reduce the harms associated with new technologi­es, and to mobilize investment­s in climaterel­ated mitigation and adaptation efforts – especially in countries that stand to incur the greatest costs from global warming despite being the least responsibl­e for it.

Even though Brazil’s new government must attend to its domestic challenges, it can and should lead the charge against these systemic, interconne­cted global risks. The world needs Brazil’s voice, which means that Brazil now needs to emerge from the shadow of the past four years.

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