Sunday Tribune

Brazil’s election hints at battles to come in the US

- ISHAAN THAROOR | Tharoor is a columnist on the foreign desk of The Washington Post

TOXICITY and polarisati­on define the national discourse. One side views the other as agents of gender-bending sin and Satanism, communist stooges bent on leftist indoctrina­tion in schools and socialist capture of the economy. The other sees its opponents goose-stepping the nation down the path of fascism and ruin, spewing bigotry, misogyny and violence along the way.

While this absolutely could be the US, we’re talking about Brazil, which today is staging the second round runoff vote in its presidenti­al elections.

The contest between hard-right incumbent President Jair Bolsonaro and leftist former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva represents the most heated showdown in the history of Brazil’s relatively young democracy. And the ideologica­l intensity on show is an echo of, but also a prologue to, battles to come in the US.

The sense of existentia­l clash has been amplified by interventi­ons elsewhere. Illiberal demagogues like former US president Donald Trump and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban are cheerleade­rs of Bolsonaro.

In Washington, meanwhile, leftwing lawmakers like Senator Bernie Sanders have been warning of the risk of Bolsonaro subverting Brazilian democracy and even launching his own January 6-style insurrecti­on should current polls prove accurate and Lula wins on election day.

“That Brazil is mirroring American politics should come as no surprise,” writes my Washington Post colleague, Anthony Faiola.

“They are both continent-sized, New World countries saddled with unresolved issues over race and the legacy of slavery. They share cultural similariti­es, from rodeos to evangelica­l voting blocs, that remain alien to most nations in Western Europe.”

As in the US, the dynamic is asymmetric. While Lula casts himself as a more inclusive figure eager to bring back happy days and lower the tensions roiling Brazilian society, Bolsonaro is a fire-breathing culture warrior,

snarling resentment at journalist­s, liberals, atheists, the poor and LGBT people. Like Trump, even while in office, Bolsonaro fumed against the political establishm­ent and prevailing order. He has for years sowed doubt over the integrity of Brazil’s electoral system, raged at high court judges impeding his will and voiced nostalgia for the days of the country’s right-wing military dictatorsh­ip.

Bolsonaro supporters see the possible return of Lula – who was jailed on corruption charges later thrown out by a Supreme Court ruling – as an unacceptab­le return of a left-leaning status quo they seek to jettison.

Lula, meanwhile, is counting on the votes of Brazilians who aren’t necessaril­y enamoured by his political legacy, but fear Bolsonaro more. In power from 2003 to 2010, Lula presided over a commoditie­s-driven economic boom his government redirected through landmark welfare programmes that

lifted millions out of poverty.

“Not only did he put three meals a day on millions of poor people’s plates, but they were then also able to start buying cars, access a loan for a house, which invigorate­d the economy even more,” said journalist Fernando Morais, author of the biography, Lula, to my colleagues.

But the shine of Lula’s rule faded amid an economic downturn and a sweeping corruption scandal that implicated much of the Brazilian political establishm­ent and animated Bolsonaro’s rise to power.

“The idea that Brazil could somehow turn back the clock by electing Lula and recapture the optimism and promise of the early 21st century has always seemed fanciful,” wrote Brian Winter, editor in chief of Americas Quarterly. “And even if Lula does win, he will be boxed in by a Congress, and indeed a society at large, that is significan­tly more conservati­ve than it

was during his first presidency.”

Bolsonaro, again not unlike his fellow traveller, Trump, is no flash in the pan. “Bolsonaris­mo has strong roots in society,” Camila Rocha, a Brazilian political scientist, told the Financial Times. “(Even if he loses,) he will be able to keep the movement going because he will have a lot of money and I think he will try to come back in four years.”

It’s far from clear that Bolsonaro will accept defeat today. He presides over a vast realm of what many analysts flatly describe as online misinforma­tion, fuelled in part by partisan influencer­s on social media. Talk of vote rigging and fraud abounds.

Attempts by the Supreme Court to rein in disinforma­tion ahead of the election have put the institutio­n and some of its judges at odds with Bolsonaro and his allies, who see themselves as victims of an establishm­ent witchhunt. A glimmer of what may come was on view the previous weekend, when Roberto Jefferson, a former congressma­n and Bolsonaro supporter, fired a rifle and threw grenades at federal police officers who were attempting to take him into custody.

The officers had come to take him into custody after Jefferson insulted a Supreme Court justice online, violating the terms of his ongoing house arrest for allegedly attacking democracy through online misinforma­tion.

“What we saw on Sunday could well be the prelude to a new wave of political violence, in particular among groups who won’t accept the election result if President Bolsonaro loses,” said Mauricio Santoro, a political scientist at Rio de Janeiro State University.

Bolsonaro distanced himself from Jefferson, who was charged with attempted murder, and condemned his actions, but Lula seized on the moment. “Hate, violence and disrespect of the law,” Lula tweeted. “Roberto Jefferson is not only a criminal, he is one of the main allies of our adversary: He is the face of everything that Bolsonaro stands for.”

Such is the febrile nature of the moment that analysts fear a Bolsonaro victory will only accelerate a process of democratic erosion in Brazil.

Oliver Stuenkel, an internatio­nal relations expert at the Getulio Vargas Foundation in São Paulo, noted that many of the world’s democratic­ally elected strongmen were emboldened only after being re-elected.

In the case of Brazil – and arguably, too, the US – there’s a vast population of voters willing to give such illiberal nationalis­m a chance.

“Brazil’s democracy would face tremendous pressure if Bolsonaro were to triumph on October 30,” Stuenkel concluded. “We aren’t choosing between two democratic candidates here,” Simone Tebet, a centre-right senator who endorsed Lula, told the Guardian. “There’s only one democrat – and without democracy we will lose our rights.”

 ?? ??
 ?? | AFP ?? THE contest between Brazil’s hard-right incumbent President Jair Bolsonaro and leftist former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva represents the most heated showdown in the history of Brazil’s relatively young democracy, says the writer.
| AFP THE contest between Brazil’s hard-right incumbent President Jair Bolsonaro and leftist former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva represents the most heated showdown in the history of Brazil’s relatively young democracy, says the writer.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa