Los Angeles Times

The U.S. proved to be a model for Brazil. And not in a good way

Supporters of defeated ex-president Jair Bolsonaro copied the Jan. 6, 2021 insurrecti­on.

-

The United States has long been a model for the world, inspiring people in other nations to throw off oppression and follow our path by creating stable, solid, democratic societies based on the rule of law, featuring the orderly and peaceful transfer of power.

So maybe it shouldn’t come as a surprise that some Brazilians tried to take a lesson from the U.S. on Sunday. It was the wrong lesson.

Brazil’s farright election deniers rioted in the capital city of Brasilia on behalf of defeated expresiden­t Jair Bolsonaro, trashing that nation’s seat of government and copying the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrecti­on and coup attempt in which President

Trump’s lies about his election defeat culminated in the sacking of the Capitol by his supporters.

The violent spectacle marked an ignominiou­s day for the South American nation, but it heaps shame as well on the U.S., which is in peril of relinquish­ing its role as a beacon of democracy and taking its place among nations for which election results are shaky, and the real decisions are handed over to mobs and the autocrats or shadowy cabals that try to manipulate them.

Two years out from the U.S. insurrecti­on, following the indepth hearings and report of the House select committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, the evidence shows that then-President Trump compounded his blatantly false claims that he was denied reelection because of voter fraud with plans to overturn the vote and retain office.

The what-ifs are chilling. Evidence presented to the committee shows that Trump weighed plans to install Justice Department officials who would falsely declare there were voting irregulari­ties. He was asked to consider declaring martial law and collect voting machines. He invited his supporters to Washington and, knowing that many were armed, told them to go to the Capitol. He watched the rioting for more than three hours before telling his supporters to stop. Vice President Mike Pence and members of Congress were in danger.

In Brazil, Bolsonaro didn’t quite deny that he was defeated by Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva in the Oct. 30 election, and he agreed to cede the office to his rival on time, on Jan. 1. But he did follow the Trump template by arguing that the vote was rigged or at least unreliable.

Unlike Trump, he wasn’t on hand for the attack. He was in Trump’s home state of Florida.

But those are cosmetic difference­s. It’s as if Brazil’s rioters thought, “Well, if North Americans can believe what they want despite the facts, and act on it, why shouldn’t we?”

So far, despite the House committee findings, and the prosecutio­n of nearly 1,000 people, neither Trump nor any of his team has been held to answer for the Jan. 6 attack.

If they are held accountabl­e, perhaps the next set of election deniers and insurrecti­onists elsewhere in the world will be dissuaded by an American model that, when push comes to shove, holds perpetrato­rs to the rule of law.

And if not, maybe the U.S. will once again be the world’s most imitated nation. But not in a good way.

It’s as if Brazil’s rioters thought, ‘Well, if North Americans can believe what they want despite the facts, and act on it, why shouldn’t we?’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States