Gulf News

BRAZIL’S SUCCESS GIVES HOPE FOR DEMOCRACY

Defeat of populist leader Bolsonaro’s bid to reclaim power with his supporters storming Parliament, Supreme Court and Presidenti­al Palace shows strength of the country’s institutio­ns

- BY ASHOK SWAIN | Special to Gulf News @GulfNews The writer is a professor of peace and conflict research at Uppsala University, Sweden.

Only a week after the inaugurati­on of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva as Brazil’s president, the supporters of former president Jair Bolsonaro stormed the country’s Parliament, Supreme Court, and Presidenti­al Palace in Brasilia. Rioters overwhelme­d the security in Three Powers Square, vandalised the buildings, seized arms from the president’s security office, and took away the country’s original 1988 constituti­on. These Bolsonaro supporters refused to accept the election result and had planned to provoke a military coup to bring Bolsonaro back to power.

This violent attack on January 8, 2023, to undermine Brazil’s democracy is similar to Trump supporters’ storming of the US Congress on January 6, 2021. Though in many ways, Trump and Bolsonaro are ideologica­lly alike, and their supporters pursued comparable anti-democratic strategies, there is no doubt that the democratic norms and institutio­ns in Brazil are not as strong and deeply rooted as in the United States. Despite Trump’s unconstitu­tional demands on vicepresid­ent and his supporters’ riotous acts, no one had thought that the key institutio­ns like the judiciary and military would go along to stop the democratic transition of power. So, it was no surprise when Joe Biden took the oath of office on January 20, 2021. But not many had that sort of confidence about the resilience of Brazil’s nascent democracy and its institutio­ns guaranteei­ng democratic transition of power.

The United States has witnessed a peaceful transfer of power for over two centuries. But in Brazil, the tradition is barely three decades old. Civilian military control, as stipulated in the 1789 US Constituti­on, has been part of the bedrock of American democracy. But, in Brazil, the military has played a powerful role in the government since the country won its independen­ce from Portugal in 1822. The military was the country’s most potent institutio­n until the ‘New Republic’ declaratio­n in 1985. Since then, Brazil has witnessed a slow transition to democracy, but Brazilians still hold the military in high regard.

Under Lula’s earlier stint as president from 2003 to 2010, and to some extent till 2016 under President Dilma Rousseff, the military gradually came under civilian control. However, after Bolsonaro became president in 2019, the military started regaining its importance in the corridors of power. Bolsonaro was a former army captain, and his vice-president was a retired general. He had also appointed several serving and reserved military officers to the key civilian posts in his government. In 2020, 6,157 military officers were in federal government jobs. Undoubtedl­y, the military gained tremendous access to power under the Bolsonaro administra­tion. Thus, Bolsonaro and his supporters had a big hope that the military would back their claim of voter fraud as the reason for the narrow loss in the presidenti­al election and would delegitimi­se the electoral victory of Lula.

Neutral role

However, Brazil’s generals decided not to align directly with Bolsonaro after the election and refused to support his conspiracy theories. In its report to Brazil’s electoral authoritie­s, a few days after the election, the military indicated that it had found no evidence of election fraud. The military also affirmed its commitment to adhering to its constituti­onal role. Generals deciding not to side with Bolsonaro openly was also partly guided by the fact that they didn’t want to be seen as partners of Bolsonaro’s misrule.

While the neutral role of the military was crucial to protect Brazil’s democracy from Bolsonaro and his supporters’ attempted coup, the independen­t judiciary and media also played their vital roles. Particular­ly Brazil’s judiciary, more forceful than even the American judiciary, has been very proactive to keep the country’s democracy on track. Brazil’s electoral court didn’t take long to ratify Lula’s victory in the election and swiftly rejected Bolsonaro’s legal complaint challengin­g it. Immediatel­y after the attempted coup, the Supreme Court removed Brasilia’s Governor for 90 days for failing to maintain security in the country’s capital.

The Supreme Court has already consented to the request of the prosecutor general’s office to investigat­e whether Bolsonaro, who is in the United States now, incited the rioting mob that stormed the government buildings. Brazil’s democracy received a severe assault from Bolsonaro’s right-wing supporters on January 8, 2023, and it survived as the United States could on January 6, 2021. However, Brazil’s success in protecting its democracy in a comparativ­ely rugged terrain is much more significan­t. The way key institutio­ns of Brazil, particular­ly the military and judiciary, decided to side with the Constituti­on and not succumb to a populist leader’s plan to hold on to power after the election defeat gives hope for the struggling democracie­s in the developing world. It also sends strong signals to those populist leaders that they may not stay in power forever just by subverting the country’s rules and institutio­ns if they lose the electoral validation.

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