Orlando Sentinel

Bolsonaro plans to stay in Orlando area

Former Brazil president working on CPAC speech

- By Skyler Swisher

Former Brazil President Jair Bolsonaro is planning to make the Orlando area his home base for at least several more weeks while the U.S. government processes his visa request and tensions remain high in his home country, his immigratio­n lawyer said Wednesday.

But he’s moved on from his place near Kissimmee to an undisclose­d location, said Felipe Alexandre, an attorney with the AG Immigratio­n law firm. As of late, the far-right Brazilian leader, who has been living in Central Florida for about three months, has been getting attention from American conservati­ve groups.

He’s scheduled to speak Saturday at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference in Washington. Former President Donald Trump will be the keynote speaker later that night.

Bolsonaro, has been likened to a “Trump of the tropics” because of his style of governance. Like Trump, he refused to concede defeat in his re-election bid. On Jan. 8, Bolsonaro’s supporters stormed government buildings in scenes reminiscen­t of the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol.

Alexandre said he doesn’t expect Bolsonaro will return to Brazil “any time soon” with his political rival leftist Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva in charge of the country.

“He is using this time to kind of relax and recoup his energy and see what his next step in life is going to be,” Alexandre said. “He’s been involved in community events. He has been trying to get some positive vibes from the people here who support him. He has overwhelmi­ng support here in Florida.”

Lula’s administra­tion is considerin­g options to force Bolsonaro to return to the country if he doesn’t voluntaril­y come back by the end of March, Bloomberg reported. Bolsonaro is facing multiple investigat­ions into matters that occurred during his term in office and whether he played a role in inciting the riots.

Bolsonaro arrived in Orlando on Dec. 30, two days before his successor was sworn into office. He stayed in a rental home at the Reunion West resort community near Disney World. The home is reportedly owned by Jose Aldo, a retired UFC fighter.

It became a rallying spot for Bolsonaro’s supporters, who greeted the former president outside the home.

Bolsonaro has been spotted around town eating at a KFC

restaurant and wandering through a Publix supermarke­t.

In early February, Bolsonaro spoke at a conservati­ve Turning Point USA event at Trump’s hotel in Doral near Miami. The crowd chanted “fraud,” and Bolsonaro reassured them about the country’s future, Associated Press reported.

“I believe in Brazil, and I am certain that Brazil will not end with the current government,” Bolsonaro said.

He also addressed several hundred supporters at an evangelica­l church in Boca Raton, the Palm Beach Post reported.

Bolsonaro arrived in the United States on a diplomatic visa and filed paperwork on Jan. 27 to convert that visa to a six-month tourist visa, Alexandre said. He can remain in the United States while the visa request is pending, a process that can take several months, the lawyer said.

“He’s just under a lot of stress right now,” Alexandre said. “I don’t think he has plans to go back to Brazil any time soon, like in the next few weeks. He wants to go back. That’s where he wants to be. He wants to be in Brazil. The environmen­t there is probably not the best for him right now.”

Forty-one Democratic members of the U.S. Congress have signed a letter calling for

Bolsonaro to be kicked out of the country. The list of signatures includes Florida Reps. Maxwell Frost, Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Lois Frankel and Jared Moskowitz.

“The United States must not provide shelter for him, or any

authoritar­ian who has inspired such violence against democratic institutio­ns,” the lawmakers wrote.

Bolsonaro is entitled to the same due process protection­s as any other foreign national who entered the country lawfully,

Alexandre said.

“The United States is a country where the laws are supposed to work, and the laws are supposed to be applied evenly regardless of somebody’s background,” he said.

 ?? REBECCA BLACKWELL/AP ?? Brazil’s right-wing former President Jair Bolsonaro speaks at an event hosted by conservati­ve group Turning Point USA at Trump National Doral Miami on Feb. 3 in Doral.
REBECCA BLACKWELL/AP Brazil’s right-wing former President Jair Bolsonaro speaks at an event hosted by conservati­ve group Turning Point USA at Trump National Doral Miami on Feb. 3 in Doral.
 ?? SKYLER SWISHER/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? About 40 supporters rallied to show their support for former Brazil President Jair Bolsonaro outside a vacation home where he is staying near Orlando.
SKYLER SWISHER/ORLANDO SENTINEL About 40 supporters rallied to show their support for former Brazil President Jair Bolsonaro outside a vacation home where he is staying near Orlando.

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