Truro News

Brazil: e hard right wins again

- Gwynne Dyer Gwynne Dyer’s new book is Growing Pains: The Future of Democracy (and Work).

A man who makes Donald Trump look like a bleeding-heart liberal will almost certainly be Brazil’s next president. Jair Bolsonaro won 46 per cent of the vote in Sunday’s rst round of the Brazilian presidenti­al election, with 12 other candidates running. Fernando Haddad, who will face him alone in the run-o in three weeks’ time, got only 29 per cent.

Haddad, who leads the socialist Workers’ Party, will pick up most of the voters whose rstchoice candidates have fallen by the wayside, but Bolsonaro needs only one in six of those votes to win the second round. Game over, in more ways than one.

Trump and Bolsonaro are populists cut from the same cloth. ey both depend heavily on social media and on the support of evangelica­l Christians. ey both oppose same-sex marriage, abortion, a rmative action for minorities, and drug liberaliza­tion. But Trump’s views shift when it is to his political advantage – he once supported most of those policies – whereas Bolsonaro has always belonged to the hard right.

Trump is an instinctiv­e authoritar­ian who chafes at the restrictio­ns of the U.S. constituti­on, but does not attack it directly. Bolsonaro praises the “glorious” period of the military dictatorsh­ip (1964-1985), in which he served as an army o cer, and claims that its only error was that “it tortured, but did not kill.” (It did, actually. At least 434 leftists were killed after being tortured.)

Trump is a racist, but he talks to his overwhelmi­ngly white ‘base’ in dog-whistle code. Last year Bolsonaro said that the members of black rural settlement­s founded by the descendant­s of slaves “don’t do anything. I don’t think they’re even good for procreatio­n anymore.” No dog whistle there.

Trump pulled the U.S. out of the climate change treaty, and Bolsonaro wants Brazil to do the same. But Bolsonaro also wants to privatize and ‘develop’ the entire Amazon: “Not one centimetre will be demarcated for indigenous reserves.”

Trump, like Bolsonaro, backs loose gun ownership laws. Both men want to bring the death penalty back (it never went away in some U.S. states). Both men consider torture to be, as Bolsonaro puts it, a “legitimate practice.” But Bolsonaro also says that “a policeman who doesn’t kill isn’t a policeman.”

Trump is a sexist who was once caught boasting on tape about his “treatment” of women, but mostly avoids such language in public. Bolsonaro told a woman member of Congress that “I’m not going to rape you, because you’re very ugly.”

He believes that women should not get the same salaries as men because they get pregnant and said that he had a daughter in “a moment of weakness” after fathering four sons.

Trump is an undiscipli­ned narcissist who claims to be a tough negotiator but will generally roll over if you throw him a few concession­s and let him declare a ‘victory’. (Consider the new North American free trade agreement, for example.) His famously short attention span disquali es him as an aspiring dictator even if he were that way inclined.

Bolsonaro, however, is a serious man. He has made a former general, Hamilton Mourão, his running mate, and promises to ll his cabinet with other generals. In a recent video produced by Haddad, he can be seen arguing: “You won’t change anything in this country through voting... You’ll only change things by hav- ing a civil war and doing the work the military regime didn’t do. Killing 30,000... If a few innocent people die, that’s alright.”

Bolsonaro doesn’t talk like that now, for obvious reasons, but there is no reason to believe that he has changed his mind. Brazil’s 200 million people may be in for some nasty surprises – and beyond the country’s borders Bolsonaro’s presidency will encourage neo-fascists and wouldbe military dictators in other Latin American countries. at’s the real concern, and it extends to other continents too. e wave of non-violent revolution­s that spread democracy to every part of the world (including Brazil) in the past few decades seems to have gone into reverse.

In some countries, like ailand and Egypt, the generals are openly back in power. In others, like Turkey, Hungary, and the Philippine­s, ‘ illiberal democracie­s’ run by strongmen have replaced the genuine article. Even in long establishe­d democracie­s like the United States, the United Kingdom and Italy the nationalis­ts and populists dominate the political scene.

ere are some counter-currents, of course. Mexico, the other Latin American giant, is getting its rst ever left-wing government this year. Hard right challenges to the establishe­d democratic order have been fended o in France, Germany and the Netherland­s. But the tide is running strongly in the other direction. How bad will it get, and how long will it stay bad? Quite bad and for quite a while, one suspects. e world is not yet heading back toward big great-power war, but we are entering the last critical decade before climate change overwhelms us with a growing number of government­s that are not only potentiall­y violent but militantly ignorant.

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