Business Day

Police raids on Bolsonaro likely to damage his party’s election hopes

- Anthony Boadle

Police raids on former president Jair Bolsonaro and his associates for allegedly plotting a coup after the 2022 election have weakened right-wing opposition to President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva ahead of October’s local elections, analysts say.

Bolsonaro, a far-right firebrand who modelled himself on former US president Donald Trump, surrendere­d his passport to police last Thursday and four of his aides have been arrested. Search warrants were served on four of his former ministers, three of them retired army generals.

That, analysts say, has dealt a blow to Bolsonaro’s right-wing Liberal Party (PL), the largest opposition party. PL president Valdemar Costa Neto was also arrested on Thursday on an unrelated gun charge and provisiona­lly released on Saturday.

“The Bolsonaro opposition has been badly hurt by this,” said Andre Cesar, an analyst at Hold Assessoria Legislativ­a, a public policy consultanc­y. “The PL will lose political muscle and have to rethink plans to triple its mayors in the October elections.”

Brazilian police accused

Bolsonaro of editing a decree to overturn the result of the 2022 election that he lost to Lula, pressuring military chiefs to join a coup attempt, and plotting to jail a supreme court justice.

Neto has been counting on Bolsonaro’s popularity with core supporters to bolster turnout for his party in October, when voters will elect mayors and councils in 5,568 municipal districts across Brazil.

However, Bolsonaro’s alleged involvemen­t in a coup conspiracy could cool support from moderate centre-right Brazilians, who were not fans of Bolsonaro but voted for him to oppose Lula, according to polling firm Quaest.

A social media survey conducted on Friday by Quaest showed 58% of the postings were critical of Bolsonaro, while 42% were favourable, indicating that he still has considerab­le support, though less than the 49.1% who voted for him against 50.9% for Lula in 2022.

“There will be a huge drain on the PL that will benefit the Workers Party,” said a former PL legislator, who left the party last year and asked to remain anonymous.

The PL did not answer a request for comment. But a PL leader in Congress, Jose Medeiros, said the investigat­ion was political persecutio­n aimed at underminin­g Bolsonaro and the party to stop a right-wing comeback in the 2026 presidenti­al race.

Even before Thursday’s operation, Lula was already enjoying warming ties with some former Bolsonaro allies.

Sao Paulo governor Tarcisio de Freitas, who was Bolsonaro’s infrastruc­ture minister and a rising conservati­ve leader, has been politicall­y pragmatic and recently met Lula for a much publicised handshake.

Minas Gerais governor Romeu Zema, a fellow rising star on Brazil’s right, said he “had learnt to work with people who I think differentl­y to”, in reference to Lula and his leftist allies.

The big losers from the fallout of the alleged coup plot will be those closest to Bolsonaro ideologica­lly, while the moderates court centrist voters who decide elections in Brazil, said Lucas de Aragao, at political risk consultanc­y Arko Advice.

“Moderate right wingers face criticism for not supporting Bolsonaro enough, but they know they will get the Bolsonaris­ta vote in a polarised left-right election,” he said.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Searching for clues: Federal police leave the headquarte­rs of the Liberal Party during an operation targeting some of former president Jair Bolsonaro’s top aides in Brasilia.
/Reuters Searching for clues: Federal police leave the headquarte­rs of the Liberal Party during an operation targeting some of former president Jair Bolsonaro’s top aides in Brasilia.

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