Los Angeles Times

Biden greets Brazil’s Lula at the White House

The presidents are focusing on their fight to save democracy and the environmen­t.

- By Tracy Wilkinson

WASHINGTON — President Biden welcomed the new leader of Brazil, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, to the White House on Friday, with each hoping for a boost from the other as they try to put their countries’ previous administra­tions behind them.

Lula, as the Brazilian president is known, and his wife arrived at the South Lawn portico, where they were greeted by Biden before heading into the White House. Reporters shouting questions about the U.S. shooting down a high-altitude aerial device Friday over Alaska were ignored by the leaders.

Biden and Lula both defeated populists with authoritar­ian tendencies in their presidenti­al elections, with the losing candidates — Donald Trump here and Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil — refusing to recognize the victories.

Supporters of the defeated incumbents attacked government institutio­ns in Washington on Jan. 6, 2021, and in Brasilia on Jan. 8 of this year, in a shocking and violent challenge to the Western Hemisphere’s two largest democracie­s.

“It’s about solidarity for our respective democracie­s and really being able to demonstrat­e that democracy can deliver,” a senior Biden administra­tion official said ahead of the Friday afternoon meeting. He requested anonymity to discuss the encounter beforehand.

Trump had a friendly relationsh­ip with Bolsonaro, a far-right politician who praised military dictatorsh­ips, attacked LGBTQ and women’s rights and ended environmen­tal restrictio­ns, resulting in massive destructio­n of the Amazon rainforest.

Biden has been keen to reset the relationsh­ip with Brazil from the moment of Lula’s victory, telephonin­g him promptly to congratula­te him and again to offer support when the attacks on his government institutio­ns broke out last month.

As Trump did with Biden in 2021, Bolsonaro refused to attend Lula’s inaugurati­on Jan. 1 and instead fled to southern Florida, where he has been staying near Disney World while attempting to obtain a new U.S. visa.

U.S. officials say they have not received a request from Brazil for Bolsonaro’s extraditio­n. Bolsonaro denies that he instigated the attacks on Brazil’s Supreme Court, Congress and presidenti­al office.

“The primary importance of this trip for Lula is the symbolism of it,” said Bruna Santos of the Brazil Institute at the Wilson Center think tank in Washington. “It is his opportunit­y to demonstrat­e his leadership and commitment to democracy and [attract] internatio­nal cooperatio­n toward fighting the extreme right.”

Lula is a veteran leftist. His other engagement­s on his short trip to the U.S. include meetings with Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) and officials at the AFL-CIO. But Lula is more pragmatic than earlier in his career and wants Biden’s support as much as that of Cuba’s leaders and others along the political spectrum, which has shifted left in much of Latin America.

After their meeting, Sanders praised Lula for his determinat­ion to stand up to “right-wing authoritar­ians” who seek to destroy democracy.

“Unlike his predecesso­r, Lula understand­s the enormous threat that climate change poses to our planet,” Sanders said. “If ever there was a time for internatio­nal solidarity on these shared challenges, this is it.”

Santos said she believes the relationsh­ip between Biden and Lula, who have known each other for years, is one of empathy.

“I don’t think Biden is looking at the region with the lens of the past, right versus left,” she said. “His agenda now is defending democracy in a world of competitio­n, democracy versus autocracy.”

The other major issue for the two presidents is “wrestling back the Amazon from organized crime,” said Cecilia Tornaghi, senior director for policy at the Americas Society in New York. Biden can make a big statement about one of his principal policy goals, the environmen­t, without much opposition, since saving the Amazon is a broadly accepted aim in the climate movement.

“It’s low-hanging fruit for Biden, while Lula needs all the help he can get,” Tornaghi said from Brazil.

The senior Biden administra­tion official said racial justice is also dominating the agenda as the leaders look at “how we can really advance shared priorities on ethnic and racial inclusion in both our countries.”

The Brazilian delegation includes Anielle Franco, the minister for racial equality — a post that was eliminated after Lula left the presidency that he has since revived. Franco’s sister, human rights activist Marielle Franco, was assassinat­ed in 2018, a political murder that remains unsolved.

But there are also areas in which Biden and Lula will not agree. Lula has refused to offer military support to Ukraine in its war with Russia, instead offering to speak to both Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and Russian President Vladimir Putin to negotiate peace.

‘Unlike his predecesso­r, Lula understand­s the enormous threat that climate change poses to our planet. If ever there was a time for internatio­nal solidarity on these shared challenges, this is it.’

— Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.)

 ?? Sarah Silbiger Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT BIDEN welcomes Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva on Friday at the White House. The meeting is “about solidarity for our respective democracie­s,” a senior Biden administra­tion official said.
Sarah Silbiger Associated Press PRESIDENT BIDEN welcomes Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva on Friday at the White House. The meeting is “about solidarity for our respective democracie­s,” a senior Biden administra­tion official said.
 ?? Susan Walsh Associated Press ?? LULA’S WIFE, Rosangela da Silva, joins the presidents on the South Lawn. The Brazilian delegation also included Anielle Franco, the minister for racial equality.
Susan Walsh Associated Press LULA’S WIFE, Rosangela da Silva, joins the presidents on the South Lawn. The Brazilian delegation also included Anielle Franco, the minister for racial equality.

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