Perfil (Sabado)

Lula delivers diverse cast with new Cabinet

A look at five key figures in Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s government.

-

Brazil’s new President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva is getting down to the business of “rebuilding” and “reunifying” the country after his divisive election battle with far-right predecesso­r Jair Bolsonaro.

The veteran leftist’s new government looks radically different from Bolsonaro’s, with 11 women, five blacks and two Indigenous ministers – a break with the previous administra­tion, which was dominated by white men and military generals. Here is a look at five key figures in the new Cabinet.

FINANCE NOVICE

Lula, 77, ignored market pressure and named a political pick for finance minister: Fernando Haddad, a longtime ally who ran for president for his Workers’ Party (PT) in 2018.

The choice has not exactly thrilled the business world: stocks in Latin America’s biggest economy fell more than three percent on the first business day of Lula’s term, with investors nervous over how he will fund his promised social spending, given Brazil’s already overstretc­hed government finances.

Haddad, 59, a lawyer who previously served as education minister and São Paulo mayor, has sought to send a message of fiscal discipline. “We’re not here to go on big-spending adventures,” he said at his swearing-in. “We’re here to ensure the economy resumes growing to meet the population’s needs in health, education and social programs, while guaranteei­ng fiscal balance and sustainabi­lity.”

ENVIRONMEN­TAL CRUSADER

Marina Silva, a veteran environmen­talist and former presidenti­al hopeful, faces the huge task of rebuilding Brazil’s environmen­tal protection agencies and staunching the destructio­n of the Amazon rainforest, which surged under Bolsonaro.

The diminutive but fiery 64-year-old environmen­t minister, who rose from a childhood of poverty in the Amazon to become a respected activist and politician, vowed as she took office to ensure Brazil “stops being an internatio­nal pariah” on climate issues.

Environmen­tal groups are calling for her to take urgent, decisive action – and for Lula to give her the power to do so. The two had a falling-out when she previously served as environmen­t minister during his first presidency. She quit in 2008 after disagreeme­nts with his pro-developmen­t policies in the Amazon.

‘REBUILDING BRIDGES’

Career diplomat Mauro Vieira, 71, says his task as Brazil’s new foreign minister is to “rebuild the country’s bridges with the world.”

Brazil is coming off four years of mounting isolation under Bolsonaro, who cultivated close ties with former US president Donald Trump but alienated many of Brazil’s traditiona­l partners, especially Europe and China.

Lula has vowed to renew Brazil’s traditiona­l multilater­alism, especially on climate issues – though he has also raised eyebrows in the West with some comments, such as saying Ukraine bears equal blame for its war with Russia.

Vieira, a respected foreign service veteran, previously served as foreign minister under ex-president Dilma Rousseff from 2015 to 2016. He took office Monday vowing: “Brazil is back.”

NORTHEASTE­RN CONNECTION

Lula, who won the October election thanks to overwhelmi­ng support in Brazil’s impoverish­ed northeast, has named four former governors from the region to his cabinet.

One of the most powerful figures in his administra­tion will be Justice Minister Flavio Dino, 54, former governor of the northeaste­rn state of Maranhão, who ran in 2015-2022.

A former judge, Dino was a vocal Lula spokesman during the transition period, condemning “unacceptab­le terrorism” by far-right hardliners refusing to accept the election result, after a Bolsonaro supporter was arrested for planting a tanker truck rigged with explosives near the Brasilia airport.

MINORITIES EXIST

New Human Rights Minister Silvio Almeida, a 46-yearold black lawyer and public intellectu­al, turned heads on his first day in office with an impassione­d speech that underlined the new administra­tion’s break with the Bolsonaro years.

Speaking to groups that complained of being marginalis­ed, discrimina­ted against or ignored under Bolsonaro – including blacks, women, the disabled and the LGBT community – he repeated over and over: “You exist, and you are valuable to us.”

The speech drew loud cheers and went viral online, cementing Almeida’s status as a rising star in Brazilian politics.

Newspapers in Spanish

Newspapers from Argentina