The Freeman

Bolsonaro government has military, conservati­ve streak

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Brazil’s next government, under incoming far-right president Jair Bolsonaro who takes power in three weeks, will be neoliberal economical­ly, morally conservati­ve and heavy reliant on a contingent of ex-military figures.

That’s the final compositio­n that has emerged after weeks of announceme­nts and casting about to fill the top posts of 22 ministries, down from 29 in the outgoing administra­tion.

Seven of the ministers will be military men. Eight have technocrat profiles. And seven are politician­s.

All are united by fierce criticism of the leftwing government­s that ruled under former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (20032010) -- who is now in prison for corruption -- and his protégé Dilma Rousseff (2011-2016) -- whose second mandate was cut short by impeachmen­t.

Bolsonaro said at a ceremony on Monday he would govern “without distinctio­n of social origin, race, sex, age or religion.”

There are just two women in Bolsonaro’s government, which is double the number in the outgoing lineup under President Michel Temer.

There are no blacks, despite half of Brazil’s population being at least partly descended from Africans.

Oliver Stuenkel, a professor of internatio­nal relations at the Getulio Vargas Foundation, said there were three distinct groups to be seen: “A nationalis­t, anti-globalist group that is oriented towards the populist politics of Donald Trump, a group of neo-liberals that controls the economic part, and another of military men with influence in various areas.”

He added: “We’ll soon see how the power play will work out between these three axes.”

A big challenge for Bolsonaro will be to bring Brazil’s economy back to full health. The country exited its worst recession on record two years ago but has put in an anemic performanc­e since.

To that end he has tapped Paulo Guedes, a product of the University of Chicago’s economic liberalism, to head up an economy superminis­try in charge of finances, planning, trade and a chunk of the scrapped labor portfolio.

Guedes, a strong advocate of privatizat­ion and small government, has named a bunch of veteran economists -- nicknamed the “Chicago Oldies” by the Brazilian press -- to take charge of state oil company Petrobras, the central bank and the BNDES developmen­t bank.

“The formation of the economic team suggests that Guedes will enjoy fairly big autonomy to carry out the reform agenda without interferen­ce from other parts of the government,” Thomaz Favaro, an analyst at the firm Control Risks, told AFP. Another priority is to fight corruption and rampant crime. Another superminis­try -- for justice this time -- will be under the command of Sergio Moro, a celebrated anti-graft judge who led the Car Wash investigat­ion that led to Lula and other politician­s being sent to prison.

Agence France-Presse

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