Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

The Guardian on Brazil’s election (Sept. 13):

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Four years ago, many Brazilians regarded the prospect of a victory for the far-right presidenti­al candidate Jair Bolsonaro first with incredulit­y and then — rightly — with horror. As the Oct. 2 election approaches, the fear that he will remain in power is greater still. He has proved a reckless and incompeten­t leader and remains a menace to democracy and the planet — egging on those destroying the Amazon rainforest, who are currently redoubling their efforts at the prospect of losing their champion. His main rival, the former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, is more than 15 percentage points ahead in the latest major poll. The danger is that Bolsonaro regards the actual vote as something of an irrelevanc­e. Around a million citizens — including leading figures from business, politics, science and the arts — have signed a manifesto warning that democracy faces “immense danger.”

Bolsonaro has abruptly cut fuel taxes, sent monthly cash transfers to poor families and is wooing evangelica­l churches devotedly again, while smearing his essentiall­y pragmatic leftist rival — who was jailed for corruption but then saw his conviction­s quashed — as a crazed ideologue.

But while double-digit inflation and high unemployme­nt may have peaked, a victory at the polls for Bolsonaro looks unlikely. His last-minute handouts are viewed cynically. Brazil lost 684,000 lives to COVID-19 as the president mocked masks and vaccines, and dismissed the threat. His family’s finances are under renewed scrutiny after a Brazilian news group claimed that he and close relatives bought 107 properties over three decades — paying for at least 51 of them in cash. Opposition is unifying, with the former environmen­t minister and presidenti­al candidate Marina Silva rallying behind Lula.

Bolsonaro, stabbed a month before 2018’s election, should know the cost of political violence better than anyone, yet continues to use aggressive rhetoric and spread hatred: “Buy your guns! It’s in the Bible!” he told supporters last month. Thanks to his relaxation of laws, the number of firearms in private hands has doubled to 2 million. The past two months have seen the killings of a local official for Lula’s Workers’ party and of another of its backers by supporters of Bolsonaro, who have also attacked other rallies and threatened politician­s with guns.

Opponents fear not only pre-election violence but also a Trump-style bid to hang on to power in defiance of the electorate. Significan­t progress has been made in tackling disinforma­tion in the country. But millions of diehard supporters are likely to see a defeat only as evidence that they have been cheated. Faced with the prospect not only of losing, but potentiall­y of jail, the president has already claimed that the voting system is unreliable. He has previously declared that his future holds only prison, death or victory — and has told supporters: “The army is on our side.”

The claim is especially chilling given Brazil’s relatively recent history of military dictatorsh­ip. Though few accept his sweeping assertion, there is real concern that he could find significan­t support within the armed forces. A clear, outright victory for Lula, ideally in the first round but more likely in a runoff, is the best result for Brazilian democracy and the planet. Other countries must make it clear that they will not tolerate any attempt by Bolsonaro to cheat, bully or menace his way to a second term.

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