The Guardian (USA)

Citizens’ manifesto declares Brazilian democracy facing ‘immense danger’

- Tom Phillips in Rio de Janeiro

Brazilian democracy faces a moment of “immense danger”, a manifesto signed by almost a million citizens has warned amid growing fears president Jair Bolsonaro could refuse to accept defeat in October’s election.

The declaratio­n – whose backers include major figures in business, politics, science and the arts – comes after Bolsonaro escalated his attacks on Brazil’s voting system and summoned hardcore supporters to hit the streets “for the last time” before the 2 October vote.

Bolsonaro’s actions have fueled fears the radical far-right populist may seek to emulate his political idol, Donald Trump, by contesting the election result or inciting a January 6-style insurrecti­on in a bid to retain power. Polls suggest Bolsonaro will lose to the leftist former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva in either the first or second round.

The manifesto, which is inspired by a historic 1977 declaratio­n denouncing Brazil’s 1964-85 dictatorsh­ip, says the country is facing “a moment of immense danger to democratic normality”. Any attempt to incite violence or promote “a rupture with constituti­onal order” would be “intolerabl­e”, it warns.

“We recently saw how authoritar­ian follies put the United States’ centurieso­ld democracy at risk. There, efforts to disrupt democracy and people’s faith in the reliabilit­y of the [electoral] process did not succeed, and nor will they here,” says the document, whose signatorie­s include three former presidents and musicians such as Caetano Veloso, Milton Nascimento and Brazil’s biggest pop star, Anitta. She has described October’s election as a battle between Voldemort and Dumbledore, with Bolsonaro representi­ng JK Rowling’s Dark Lord.

On Thursday morning hundreds of pro-democracy campaigner­s assembled at the University of São Paulo’s law school to hear the manifesto – which Bolsonaro has belitted as “some little letter” – read publicly for the first time.

Simultaneo­us readings took place in cities across the country, including Belo Horizonte and Rio, as well as at foreign universiti­es such as King’s College London. Hundreds of acts and protests were planned.

Large crowds of students, activists and academics packed Rio’s Catholic University to hear the pronouncem­ent, flanked by banners reading: ‘Democracy is life’.

“Brazil is facing a critical moment. We are under threat from the far-right … this is perhaps the most important election of our lifetimes,” said Carlos Fidelis Ponte, a 64-year-old researcher from Brazil’s Fiocruz research institute.

“Bolsonaro’s re-election would be a total disaster. I feel I am living in a country that has been hijacked,” Ponte said.

“This is something historic. It is an important moment to resist,” said Maria Clara Walcacer, a 22-year-old psychology student who had come wearing a lilac sticker that read “Bolsonaro out!”

The former Brazil footballer and longtime democracy advocate Walter Casagrande said he hoped the “anticoup” manifesto would prove a historic turning point comparable to the Diretas Já movement which helped usher out the dictatorsh­ip in the 1980s.

“[Bolsonaro] claims he is defending democracy and wants freedom. He doesn’t want anything of the kind. On the contrary. He wants to be a dictator,” said Casagrande, although he predicted Bolsonaro would fail to achieve that goal.

Another signatory, the singersong­writer Nando Reis, said he had signed to protest the “terror and destructio­n” Bolsonaro had inflicted on South America’s largest democracy since taking office in 2019. “We have been through three years and eight months of hell with this man in the presidency.”

Reis voiced hope citizens would vote out Bolsonaro but, like many, fears he will not go quietly: “If he loses the election it is very likely that he will contest the vote. Everything he says is paving the way for this.”

Bolsonaro’s posturing, which included summoning foreign ambassador­s last month to denigrate his own country’s electronic voting system with false informatio­n, has also caused internatio­nal alarm.

The former US ambassador to Brazil, Thomas Shannon, said: “I’m very concerned by the effort of president Bolsonaro and his team to undermine the credibilit­y of the institutio­ns and the processes by which elections are conducted in Brazil. For me that can only have one purpose, which is to try to prevent an election from happening or change their course or outcome.”

“Bolsonaro and his team have looked very closely at what happened on January 6 trying to understand why it was that a sitting president failed in his effort to overturn election results,” added Shannon, who called the prodemocra­cy mobilizati­on an important step towards convincing Bolsonaro to rethink any possible interventi­on.

If Bolsonaro realized none of the major political institutio­ns and the armed forces would support a bid to halt or meddle in the vote “then he might decide for his own well-being that there’s nothing he has to do but let the election play out”.

“But if he thought there was a way he could intervene – to intervene successful­ly – he would,” Shannon warned.

 ?? Photograph: Ueslei Marcelino/Reuters ?? Bolsonaro at the opening of the National Agro Meeting on Wednesday. Polls suggest Bolsonaro will lose to Lula in either the first or second round.
Photograph: Ueslei Marcelino/Reuters Bolsonaro at the opening of the National Agro Meeting on Wednesday. Polls suggest Bolsonaro will lose to Lula in either the first or second round.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States