New Era

Brazil transition takes shape

… Bolsonaro keeps low profile

- -Nampa/AFP

BRASÍLIA - The head of Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s transition on Tuesday picked a team to smooth the leftist’s ascent to Brazil’s presidency, while outgoing president Jair Bolsonaro remained uncharacte­ristically silent after his election loss.

Lula’s vice president-elect Geraldo Alckmin named a political council and a team of economists, among others, who will lay the groundwork for the changeover of government on January 1.

“We are working, the future has already begun,” Lula wrote on Twitter.

OnWednesda­y,Lulametwit­h the leaders of both chambers of Congress in Brasilia to discuss budget issues as he looks to implement his campaign promises of increased social spending, while grappling with a struggling economy.

Lula, who will be serving a third term as president, is facing a far tougher outlook than the commoditie­s-fueled boom he presided over in the 2000s.

The economics team appointed by Alckmin includes

economists Andre Lara Resende and Persio Arisa, who helped draw up a plan to halt hyperinfla­tion in Brazil in the nineties. Meanwhile, Bolsonaro has all but disappeare­d from public view and even his beloved social media accounts.

The far-right president responded to his defeat in the October 30 runoff election with nearly two days of silence as his supporters blocked highways in protest and urged the military to intervene to keep him in power.

Bolsonaro finally made a brief statement on November 1, saying he would respect the constituti­on. However, he neither conceded defeat nor congratula­ted Lula.

He posted a video the following night, urging supporters to stop blocking highways - though he encouraged “legitimate demonstrat­ions.”

The protesters largely acquiesced, though a handful of rogue roadblocks remain, as well as demonstrat­ions outside military bases.

Bolsonaro, 67, has remained

silent since.

According to his public agenda, he has been holed up at his official residence since November 1, when he met with cabinet ministers.

Newspaper O Globo reported Bolsonaro was home with “health issues,” had a fever and appeared exhausted, citing sources close to the president.

Bolsonaro’s office did not immediatel­y respond to questions about his health from AFP.

The leader of the president’s Liberal Party (PL), Valdemar Costa Neto, said Bolsonaro’s silence was “natural” given his narrow loss - 50.9% of the vote to 49.1%, the tightest presidenti­al race in Brazil’s modern history.

“When you lose an election like that, you feel it in your heart,” Neto told a news conference.

“It’s a great sadness.” Bolsonaro has not posted to his usually bustling Twitter account since the runoff, except last Wednesday’s video and an enigmatic picture posted Tuesday, showing the president standing before a crowd of supporters, a Brazilian flag in the background.

Bolsonaro has even stopped giving his weekly live address on Facebook, one of the main communicat­ion channels he has relied on to speak to his base throughout his presidency.

The rest of the Bolsonaro clan has also been unusually quiet online since the election.

The day after, Senator Flavio Bolsonaro, the president’s eldest son, posted a message saying, “Dad, I’m with you no matter what.”

Sunday, he posted two other messages condemning alleged “censorship” of his father’s supporters on social media - a frequent complaint from the pro-Bolsonaro camp as Brazilian authoritie­s have moved to block disinforma­tion online.

Congressma­n Eduardo Bolsonaro, Flavio’s younger brother, meanwhile shared a post from new Twitter owner Elon Musk promising to “look into” claims that pro-Bolsonaro users’ accounts were unfairly suspended.

 ?? ?? Man of the moment… Incoming president of Brazil Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.
Man of the moment… Incoming president of Brazil Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

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