The Guardian Australia

Bolsonaro breaks election silence but refuses to recognise Lula’s victory

- Tom Phillips in Rio de Janeiro and Andrew Downie in São Paulo

Brazil’s far-right president Jair Bolsonaro has broken his almost twoday silence over his defeat in Sunday’s presidenti­al election – but refused to congratula­te or recognize the victory of his rival Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

After Bolsonaro had delivered his message, however, his chief of staff indicated that his administra­tion would not contest the election result.

Bolsonaro lost what was widely seen as Brazil’s most important election in decades by a margin of 2.1m votes – 50.9% to 49.1% – and dozens of world leaders swiftly recognized Lula’s victory.

But Bolsonaro said nothing, with local media reports suggesting the erratic rightwing populist was holed up in his presidenti­al residence consumed by anger, despondenc­y and disbelief.

In a brief appearance on Tuesday afternoon Bolsonaro at last broke his silence, amid growing public indignatio­n at his undemocrat­ic stance.

“Our dreams are more alive than ever,” the 67-year-old told journalist­s who had been summoned to the Alvorada palace in the capital Brasília.

Bolsonaro, who is the first serving president to lose a re-election bid in Brazilian history, made no mention of the election’s winner and did not say whether he accepted the result.

He thanked the 58 million voters who had backed his failed campaign but did not explicitly say he would respect Lula’s win or allude to the 60 million people who voted for his opponent.

“As president and as a citizen I will continue to follow all the commandmen­ts of our constituti­on,” Bolsonaro said ambiguousl­y.

Bolsonaro also alluded to baseless claims that Sunday’s election had not been fair. He said the post-election protests being staged by hardcore supporters – including using trucks and tires to block key highways – were the fruit of “indignatio­n and a feeling of injustice about how the electoral process played out”.

“Peaceful protests will always be welcome,” Bolsonaro said, adding, though, that destructio­n and impeding people’sright to come and go was not acceptable.

However, Ciro Nogueira, the president’s chief of staff said: “President Jair Bolsonaro … has authorised me that when provoked according to the law we will begin the transition process,” he said.

The political analyst Thomas Traumann said Nogueira’s remarks represente­d a formal recognitio­n that Bolsonaro had lost the election and that there would be a change of power at the end of the year.

The supreme court echoed that interpreta­tion in a statement which said that by green-lighting the transition process, Bolsonaro had “recognized the final result of the elections”.

Traumann believed Bolsonaro’s refusal to categorica­lly concede and his signal to protesters reflected a behindthe-scenes effort to secure some kind of informal amnesty that would shield him from prosecutio­n once he steps down and loses presidenti­al immunity.

Observers believe that after leaving power Bolsonaro could find himself exposed to a multitude of possible investigat­ions and charges relating to fake news, anti-democratic behaviour, alleged corruption and his handling of a Covid pandemic which killed nearly 700,000 Brazilians.

“He is clearly afraid of prison … so what he’s trying to do is negotiate with the only card he has left, which is big street protests,” Traumann said.

On Tuesday night Bolsonaro was reportedly locked in talks with at least six members of the supreme court as part of that supposed negotiatio­n. One prominent political journalist, Guilherme Amado, said the president planned to “request that neither he nor his family be persecuted” once he stepped down.

On Tuesday morning the supreme court ruled that the federal highway police should “immediatel­y take all measures” to clear the roads Bolsonaro supporters had illegally blocked.

Owners of lorries being used as barricades would be fined 100,000 reais (£17,000) for every hour they remained part of the blockade, the court said.

In São Paulo on Monday night, roads near the internatio­nal air

port, one of South America’s busiest, were backed up with traffic, leading some passengers to pull their luggage through the tailbacks on foot to try and catch their flights. More than two dozen flights were cancelled because pilots and crew could not reach the airport.

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