Bangkok Post

Presidenti­al candidate rejects KKK backing

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SAO PAULO: Jair Bolsonaro, the farright front-runner in Brazil’s presidenti­al race, is famous for his incendiary comments, but on Tuesday he rejected an out-of-the-blue endorsemen­t of sorts from David Duke, the former grand wizard of the Ku Klux Klan.

“I refuse any kind of support coming from supremacis­t groups,” Mr Bolsonaro said in a tweet in English. In another tweet, in Portuguese, he said: “To exploit this to try to influence an election in Brazil is an enormous stupidity! It’s not knowing the Brazilian people, who are mixed race.”

Mr Duke, who also endorsed Donald Trump during the 2016 election in the United States, mentioned Mr Bolsonaro during his radio programme a week ago.

“He sounds like us,” Mr Duke said in comments picked up by BBC News Brasil and shared widely on social media in Brazil.

“He looks like any white guy in America — for that matter Portugal or Spain or Germany or France or the UK,” Mr Duke said. “And he’s talking about the demographi­c disaster that’s in Brazil and the massive crime that exists in that. For example, the black boroughs and so forth of Rio de Janeiro.”

During the programme, Mr Duke declared that “nationalis­t movements which are basically pro-European are definitely sweeping the world,” and he called Mr Bolsonaro’s rise part of that trend.

Mr Bolsonaro is the front-runner by a wide margin ahead of a runoff vote on Oct 28, riding a wave of anger and frustratio­n over rampant political corruption and a crime epidemic.

For many years, Mr Bolsonaro, a former army captain, was a marginal figure in Congress, best known for defending the military dictatorsh­ip and for offensive comments about women, blacks and gays. Earlier this year, he was investigat­ed for inciting hatred and discrimina­tion.

In one oft-cited remark, he spoke disparagin­gly of quilombola­s, traditiona­l communitie­s of Afro-Brazilians, saying residents “did nothing”. He added: “I think they don’t even manage to procreate anymore.”

But as a corruption scandal engulfed the country’s major parties, sending powerful leaders to jail, Mr Bolsonaro’s clean slate enabled him to reinvent himself as an anti-establishm­ent figure who would take on the system and rising crime.

His critics accuse him of racism and misogyny, and tens of thousands of women organised protest marches with the slogan #EleNao — or #NotHim. But Mr Bolsonaro came out of the first round of voting with a strong lead thanks in part to last-minute backing from the evangelica­l lobby and powerful agribusine­ss groups.

His supporters say he may not be politicall­y correct, but he is a straight shooter who defends family values and traditiona­l Christian education.

In 2016, Mr Trump caused an uproar when he initially declined to disavow Mr Duke after he declared on his radio program that “voting against Donald Trump at this point, is really treason to your heritage.”

“I don’t know David Duke,” Mr Trump said in an interview on CNN. “I don’t believe I’ve ever met him.”

 ??  ?? Bolsonaro: Front-runner
Bolsonaro: Front-runner

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