Muscat Daily

Young conservati­ves seek change in Brazil

Jair Bolsonaro, a far right candidate is growing popular despite his extreme views; members of rightwing movement MBL are entering politics

- Katy Watson

Sara Winter has always had strong views. As an activist, she used to chain herself to fences in protest at chauvinism and sexual violence. She was, by her own admission, one of the most high-profile feminists in Brazil.

Sara is certainly striking. She has peroxide blonde hair, tattoos and a snappy dress sense.

But the thing that stands out the most is the badge she is wearing on her top. It is a picture of a skull with a knife through it and two guns.

“It’s my favourite police organisati­on, Bope,” she says, proudly referring to the logo of Brazil’s Special Police Operations Battalion.

“They climb into the favelas and kill the bad guys. They put their lives at risk all the time to save the population of Rio.”

It is not the sort of comment you would expect from a liberal activist. But Sara has had a political about-turn in recent years.

‘Second chance’

Six years after having an abortion, Sara became pregnant again. Between the two pregnancie­s, she had regained her faith in the Catholic Church and her views on pregnancy - and politics - changed radically.

“I was so happy because I felt that God was giving me a second chance to be a mum,” she recalls.

“I decided to come back to the Church and I think I can help women much more with conservati­ve politics than feminism.”

“[I spent] five years being the most popular feminist in Brazil and I did nothing for women,” she says.

“I just spent this time talking about abortion and legalising drugs and communism and I called that empowering myself.”

Sara’s U-turn is unusual but it mirrors to some extent what is happening in Brazil.

For more than 15 years, Brazil was governed by the left. Former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva rose to power in 2003 promising change.

But with the country’s most loved politician now facing 12 years in prison for cor-

ruption, and with his successor Dilma Rousseff impeached, people are disillusio­ned. The left did not deliver, so people want change.

‘Brazilian Trump’

Sara’s political idol is the far-right presidenti­al candidate Jair Bolsonaro.

Many refer to Bolsonaro as the ‘Brazilian Trump’, the two are very different men in very different countries but the similariti­es, or rather the set of circumstan­ces that allow them to both exist, are uncanny.

Bolsonaro brands himself as different from all the rest, a clean candidate amid a sea of corrupt politician­s that has been the talk of Brazil for the past few years.

He has been accused of being homophobic and told a congresswo­man she was not worth raping. He has ranted against minorities and has called for looser gun laws.

Jair Bolsonaro does not hold back. But Sara will not have a bad word said against him.

“I know it sounds really awkward, but really, if any woman could see Bolsonaro’s policies, she would be in love, like me!”

She gushingly talks about one of his proposals - chemically castrating rapists.

“We have so many feminist congresswo­men, why didn’t they suggest this before?” she asks.

“Bolsonaro did it.” While many people wince at Jair Bolsonaro’s politics, he remains a popular figure.

He is currently second in the presidenti­al polls after former president Lula, who may not even be able to run now because of his corruption conviction.

While Bolsonaro is at the extreme end of the right, conservati­ve politics more generally are enjoying a comeback in Brazil - this in a country that until 1985 was ruled by a military dictatorsh­ip.

Rightwing pressure groups like the Free Brazil Movement, or MBL in Portuguese, are finding big audiences.

The MBL started its life on the streets, calling for then President Dilma Rousseff to be impeached.

It has since strengthen­ed by going online. It has more than 2.5mn followers on Facebook who avidly watch their political videos criticisin­g Brazil’s leftwing politician­s.

The MBL calls itself libertaria­n. It wants a freer country with a smaller state, its way. But its politics are hard to define because most members also hold conservati­ve views on abortion and gun ownership.

“The problem is that some parts of Brazilian mentality, especially the leftwing mentality, say that the Conservati­ves are always totalitari­ans, always on the wrong side of things,” says Pedro Ferreira, an MBL co-founder.

“Whenever they try to voice what they feel they are called fascists or Nazis.” He says the Internet has changed things. It has allowed people to find their own voice, to find their values.

“That is why we have Trump, that is why we have Brexit, that is why we have MBL. We have the common people’s voice being heard,” he says.

“That is scaring a lot of people but that is very democratic.”

Experts say Brazil’s corruption scandals have been fertile ground for this kind of politics.

“You have a total mistrust of every kind of authority in Brazil, so for these movements that propagate hell, that show that everything is wrong, this kind of scenario is very useful,” says Prof Rafael Alcadipani.

“They pick up very small things in reality and try to magnify them as if these were the biggest problems in Brazil.”

Prof Alcadipani accuses movements like the MBL of propagatin­g fake news. But it is an accusation the right makes against the left, too.

A wider vision of the right?

While the MBL essentiall­y remains a movement, some of its members have entered politics on other parties' tickets.

Twenty one year old Fernando Holiday may be one of the MBL’s leading figures but he ran for and won a seat as city councillor in São Paulo for the Democrats party.

An unusual poster boy for conservati­sm, he comes from a poor family and is gay.

He thinks young Brazilians had, until recently, become disengaged with politics.

“The right became synonymous with more conservati­ve politics, irrelevant for minorities,” he says.

“It also became associated with authoritar­ian, even nostalgic feelings about the dictatorsh­ip, like Bolsonaro.”

“But I think we bring a wider vision of what the right is,” he explains.

“Not everything fits into a standard box and is determined by rigid rules.”

 ??  ??
 ?? (AFP) ?? Marcelo Freixo (left), Rio de Janeiro state deputy for the Socialism and Liberty Party (PSOL) and Monica Tereza Benicio (right), the widow of the late activist Marielle Franco, attend a rally of Brazilian leftist parties at Circo Voador in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Monday. The chief justice of Brazil's Supreme Court urged calm and warned against violence ahead of a ruling that could send former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva to prison - or give him a get-out-of-jail card
(AFP) Marcelo Freixo (left), Rio de Janeiro state deputy for the Socialism and Liberty Party (PSOL) and Monica Tereza Benicio (right), the widow of the late activist Marielle Franco, attend a rally of Brazilian leftist parties at Circo Voador in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Monday. The chief justice of Brazil's Supreme Court urged calm and warned against violence ahead of a ruling that could send former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva to prison - or give him a get-out-of-jail card
 ??  ?? Brazil’s high-profile feminist Sara Winter
Brazil’s high-profile feminist Sara Winter
 ??  ?? Leftist leader Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva
Leftist leader Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva

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