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Crafty Lula won’t give it up all too soon

The former Brazilian president could very well wriggle out of the bribery allegation­s against him to return to power in next year’s elections

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didn’t watch Luiz Enacio Lula da Silva’s five-hour questionin­g with the judge two weeks ago. A trial shouldn’t be a show, so I left that circus to the journalist­s. From what I’ve seen, it seems clear enough that the former Brazilian president is in a pickle. Instead of actually answering the magistrate’s questions, he merely said he didn’t know anything, even when presented with an incriminat­ing document about the beach apartment he allegedly received as a bribe.

No, Lula brushed the whole thing off, saying that was all a part of his deceased wife Marisa’s business ...

And yet most people actually think Lula did pretty well in court. He demonstrat­ed all his cunning, positioned himself as the victim of a partisan judge and demonstrat­ed that he still has what it takes to return to Brazil’s political ring before the presidenti­al election in 2018. Two games are being played at the same time. The first one is legal, played along clear and welldefine­d boundaries (or so we hope). In this game, Lula is unquestion­ably being beaten. Nothing he told the judge neither altered the might of the evidence against him nor cleared his name in this strange penthouse apartment affair.

Clearly, Lula’s business isn’t money but power. Of course, it doesn’t mean he can’t take some economic advantage here or there. But as it happens, he was earning $200,000 (Dh735,600) per appearance on the global lecture circuit. Why would he then accept an apartment illicitly if he would have been able to purchase it without making much of a dent in his accounts? Only a profound indifferen­ce towards legality, the feeling that he was genuinely above the law, would explain this. The other game, of course, is the political one. Here, there are no permanent rules. Anything that works, that sticks, anything to help conquer power, is acceptable. Lula is a Brazilian master of this game; and he’s confident that, if he manages to enter the presidenti­al race next year, he will avoid jail and win a remarkable return to the office he had held from 2003-2011. He also demonstrat­es he’s learned his lesson from his two previous mandates: He will do anything to annihilate any threat to his position, starting with freedom of the press.

Such polarisati­on turns out to fit him like a glove. The last thing he wants is to be seen for what he actually is: A normal, common defendant under investigat­ion for potentiall­y criminal behaviour. The more his trials are perceived as political war, facing crusading Justice Sergio Moro, the more Lula will benefit from the situation. The high point of this strategy will be entering the race for the 2018 presidenti­al election. Once his name is among the list of candidates, the game changes. No legal decision will be able to stand in his way given the direct political impact.Imagine the beautiful future taking shape: Lula, found guilty in the first instance but quick to appeal to a higher court, enters the presidenti­al race; the most ferocious campaign in the history of Brazil ensues; he wins.

The judiciary will find itself faced with a dilemma: It could sentence the elected president, but declaring his candidacy invalid would be an incendiary decision that could well spark open violence on the streets; or it could look the other way and submit to executive privilege, making the president officially above the law.

In either case, the beach apartment wouldn’t be remembered as a careless lapse into hubris, but as the omen of his veritable omnipotenc­e. Measured in dramatic terms, Brazilian justice and politics will continue to beat the best of Netflix.

Folha de S. Paulo/ Joel Pinheiro Da Fonseca is a Brazilian economist.

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