A Genuine Fascist Is on the Verge of Power in Brazil
- By Andy Robinson, www.thenation.com
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- These were true believers, camped outside Jair Bolsonaro’s plush beachside home in the nouveau riche
resort of Barra da Tijuca, 25 miles from the center of Rio and a
stone’s throw from the Olympic village and the Atlantic surf. “He is the
messiah! He was knifed, but rather than stay at home or lie on the
beach, he is staying on to fight for his country,” said a woman wearing
the jersey of Brazil’s national soccer team with Bolsonaro’s name
printed on the back where usually you might see that of Neymar or
Marcelo. The far-right candidate, now the clear favorite in Sunday’s
presidential runoff election, who was stabbed before the first round of
voting, now runs his campaign from his Barra da Tijuca condominium with
the help of his three sons, two of whom are members of Congress.
The Bolsonaristas were ebullient as their hero’s lead
over left-wing Workers’ Party (PT) candidate Fernando Haddad widened to
20 points. “I’m seeing the light at the end of the tunnel,” said José
Ruiz Barcellos, who wore an Incredible Hulk T-shirt, his Armani shades
reflecting the green and yellow Brazilian flags waved frantically by the
assembled Bolsonaristas. The flag says “Ordem e Progresso,” but the
Bolsonaristas put special emphasis on order.
“He will fund the police—we can’t go out here for
fear of being mugged,” said another woman, who dismissed claims that
Bolsonaro is violently misogynistic as fake news, despite abundant evidence
to the contrary. A jeep with a “genuinely militarized” sticker was
loaded with inflatable dolls of longtime Workers’ Party leader and
former Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva in a striped prison
uniform.
The usual rage was vented against the Workers’ Party
and its nonexistent plan to turn Brazil into another Venezuela, though a
new enemy had entered the rhetoric: The establishment daily Folha de S.Paulo
has now been earmarked for attacks after it exposed an avalanche of
disinformation by Bolsonaro supporters on Facebook and WhatsApp. “I know
you’re from Folha de S.Paulo; you are
powerful, but soon you will lose,” said another woman, bizarrely
convinced, despite my faltering Portuguese, that I worked for the
Brazilian paper. When Bolsonaro drove by in a black SUV with tinted
windows, the crowd went wild and a cacophony of car horns filled the
avenue. “Mito, Bolsonaro chegou!” they shouted (“The legend, Bolsonaro, has arrived!”)
Once inside, the candidate made a video for
transmission at the Bolsonarista rally that same day in São Paulo, in
which he pledged that, once in power, he would “banish the marginal reds
[delinquents of the left] from the fatherland; they will leave or be
imprisoned,” he threatened, in a “cleansing never seen before in this
country.” With a blank expression, his gaze barely connecting with the
camera, he then added that former PT president Lula, controversially imprisoned
for money laundering, “will rot in jail” and soon be accompanied by
Haddad. This is the sort of talk that the Bolsonarista base loves to
hear and that has already cost the life of Reginaldo Rosário da Costa, a
63-year-old black capoeira master in Salvador de Bahia, murdered by a
Bolsonaro supporter on October 8. That was one of a series of attacks on
Afro-Brazilians and members of the LGBT community in recent weeks.
But
the hard-core Bolsonaristas are just the beginning of Brazil’s
dangerous flirtation with the ex-captain of the parachute regiment.
After more than two decades of insignificance, spouting almost comical
rhetoric from his solitary seat in a corrupt Congress, Bolsonaro has
moved irresistibly, like Brecht’s Arturo Ui, into the hearts if not the
minds of millions of disenchanted Brazilians. His supporters are
everywhere in Rio, and not just among those well-paid white males
enamored of guns or the evangelicals espousing “family vales,” the
traditional base of Bolsonaro, himself a gun-loving Christian
fundamentalist, baptized in Israel in 2016.
In the past month, Bolsonaro has become mainstream. “I’m voting Bolsonaro,” said a young black woman who served pão de queijo
in the bakery across the road from Rio’s breathtaking lagoon, though
she could not explain why. “We need jobs and investment and the markets
like Bolsonaro,” said a parking attendant in Copacabana who supported
tough police action against drug traffickers in the favelas above (a
gunfight between police and traffickers broke out nearby just hours
afterward). There were even Bolsonaro voters in the Afro-Brazilian
Umbanda spiritual center in the peripheral Rio district of Oswaldo Cruz,
considered a school of Satanism by Bolsonaro evangelicals. “I’ll vote
Bolsonaro; the system is corrupt and I want someone different,” said
Rodrigo, one of the counselors who induce spiritual possession with the
help of Afro-Brazilian Vodum techniques.
These were not the fanatics of Barra da Tijuca, just
ordinary cariocas who have come to believe that the candidate is the
last chance to fight a dysfunctional political system and a crime-ridden
society. Support for the far-right icon has snowballed in the past
three weeks, with millions of Brazilians seduced by what they see as an
anti-establishment maverick who offers fast solutions to violent crime,
mass unemployment, and endemic political corruption. Most do not approve
of Bolsonaro’s violent rhetoric, expressing prejudices so openly that
even Donald Trump would blink. But such is the disenchantment with the
status quo in Brazil that his outrageous statements appear to make him
credible as a politician who will break the system.
Given that Lula’s position in the polls was dominant
until he was forced by the electoral authority to withdraw his candidacy
in September, it is clear that a significant number of the
ex-president’s supporters will now vote for Bolsonaro, an absurd feature
of this election, in which confusion and disinformation have undermined
logic. The pro-Bolsonaro wave is strongest in the south and center,
which are whiter and wealthier, and in the megalopolis of São Paulo and
Rio, while the PT hangs on in the northeast, Lula’s homeland, where
Haddad is campaigning in an attempt to stem the Bolsonaro tide in the
party’s traditional base.
How
did this happen so quickly? After all, only weeks before the
first-round election on October 7, most analysts expected Bolsonaro to
be rejected in a second round, with a pro-democratic vote choosing
Haddad as the least of the evils. A powerful last-minute surge before
the first round, though, which took Bolsonaro’s vote to 46 percent,
changed perceptions in the last week of the campaign. The pro-Bolsonaro
wave has only strengthened since then, cresting at around 57 percent of
the electorate in the latest polling.
Few expected this level of support for a
candidate of such extreme right-wing views—as close to fascism as you
will get in the world today, despite a growing number of contenders. To
cite a few examples: Bolsonaro’s role model is the Brazilian general
Brilhante Ustra, whose army unit tortured dissidents—former president
Dilma Rousseff was one victim among hundreds—during the military
dictatorship of 1964–85. Bolsonaro’s son Eduardo announced at a meeting
in July that was filmed and circulated widely this week that “all you
need is a soldier and a corporal to close the Supreme Court.”
Bolsonaro’s candidate for vice president, retired general Hamilton
Mourão, has also defended military intervention to end corruption in the
judicial system. Bolsonaro has stated in the past that 30,000 people
would need to be killed in a civil war against communists before
democracy is possible in Brazil. His misogyny, homophobia, and racism
are so openly expressed that even Marine Le Pen called his rhetoric
unpleasant.
Since 80 percent of the Brazilian public support
democracy, according to a recent Folha poll, Haddad was hoping that a
broad alliance of political, civic, and business leaders would help to
educate a poorly informed electorate—many of them denied basic education
by centuries of subjugation to a privileged elite—about Bolsonaro’s
true colors. But as the October 28 election approaches, no such alliance
has emerged.
Rather
than point out the dangers inherent in a Bolsonaro victory, investors
in financial markets have euphorically celebrated Bolsonaro’s meteoric
ascent, with bank analysts publicly cheering his commitment to radical
privatization, pension “reform,” tax cuts, and the downsizing of the
Brazilian state. Bolsonaro’s University of Chicago–trained economic
adviser, Paulo Guedes, was eulogized by brokers on Avenida Paulista. The
real has strengthened and the stock markets have posted double-digit
increases. Instead of rejecting Bolsonaro’s tirades against diversity
and freedom of expression, corporate chiefs such as the head of
beer-maker Ambev have readily met with Bolsonaro and chosen to warn
against the PT’s defense of state-owned companies and plans to rein in
the power of private banks.
According to Folha de S.Paulo,
leading bank executives from Bank of America, Goldman Sachs, and
Santander are being considered for posts in the Bolsonaro government.
This has all helped to give him a more acceptable veneer, even to those
who do not sympathize with his extreme views. Markets are watched
closely here by an electorate that is punished by every inflationary
depreciation of the real and every consequent hike in interest rates.
The intrepid Harvard-trained attorneys of the Lava
Jato (car wash) anti-corruption probe lent a hand to Bolsonaro by
re-releasing—months after its initial publication, and just as Haddad
was gaining momentum before the first round—old plea-bargain testimony
from former Lula finance minister Antonio Palocci that was damaging to
the PT. Even leading judges appear more concerned about the PT than
about the Bolsonaro family, despite the extremist candidate’s scant
respect for Brazil’s Supreme Court. Three examples: The electoral
authority banned a PT election ad that showed images of victims of
torture ordered by Bolsonaro’s hero, Brilhante Ustra (PT polling showed
that this campaign had been effective in countering Bolsonaro’s image as
the new messiah). Second, Bolsonaro’s fake-news campaign on WhatsApp
has been only mildly criticized by judges. Third, the Supreme Court has
turned down a request by Folha de S.Paulo to interview Lula da Silva about the questionable charges of corruption against him.
Of the candidates defeated in the first round, only
Marina Silva—the environmental champion who is understandably appalled
by Bolsonaro’s plans to give carte blanche to Amazon deforestation and
to withdraw from the Paris climate accord—has declared support for
Haddad, although even that came late. Geraldo Alckmin, the establishment
candidate for the center-right Brazilian Social Democracy Party (PSDB),
who took only 5 percent of the vote in the first round, has refused to
take sides. Fernando Henrique Cardoso, the former president and PSDB
member who supported Alckmin, has criticized Bolsonaro but has not taken
the crucial step of endorsing Haddad. Not even Ciro Gomes, former
minister in the first PT government along with Haddad, has actively
supported him. After taking 12 percent of the vote on a center-left
platform in the first round, he went on vacation to Europe, calling
Brazil “a sick country.”
After Bolsonaro’s incendiary speeches from his Barra
da Tijuca home on Sunday and the support of his son for a corporal-led
putsch against the Supreme Court, some in the establishment appear to
have finally awoken to the dangers. Two Supreme Court judges condemned
Bolsonaro Jr.’s remark as a violation of the rule of law (though so far,
none have filed suit against Bolsonaro or questioned the legality of
his candidacy). Cardoso said the comment “stinks of fascism.” Cardoso
and other PSDB leaders have reportedly agreed to draw up a manifesto in
defense of democracy, although without explicitly supporting Haddad.
This is almost certainly too late. And support for
Haddad from the discredited political leaders may even strengthen
Bolsonaro’s rising wave of support, driven by an effective operation of
false news in a country rivaled only by the United States for its
addiction to social networks. Anti-PT sentiment is intense among half
the electorate, fed constantly over the past five years by politically
motivated attorneys who have targeted the PT for corruption, which is
endemic across all parties in Brazil.
The news that Bolsonaro is considering appointing
Lava Jato judge Sergio Moro—responsible for Lula’s imprisonment—to the
Supreme Court will help the far-right candidate, though Moro’s
reputation as superhero (he is a fan of Batman and Superman) has faded
in the past year, as more evidence has emerged of his political bias.
The PT’s disastrous economic mismanagement in the Dilma Rousseff years—before
her impeachment in 2016—combined with the failure of her successor
Michel Temer’s subsequent policies, is another factor in Bolsonaro’s
rise. The austerity program implemented by Rousseff worsened the
recession, while opposition in Congress and the media accused her of
fiscal profligacy, a disastrous combination for the PT’s credibility,
though Temer continued on the same path. At the same time, the steady
growth of conservative evangelicalism among the Brazilian poor has
fueled a culture war that has detached working-class voters from the
left.
The Brazilian elite’s failure to support
Haddad is another reminder that keeping the PT out of government is now
considered by many of them to be a greater priority than democracy
itself. After the collapse of the center-right, Bolsonaro seems to be
the only option for those in São Paulo—and Wall Street—who support
radical liberalization of the Brazilian economy.
“They will pay the price for this. The PT is the only
party fighting fascism. This will give the left the moral advantage in
the future, and Lula will be seen increasingly as a Mandela,” said an
economist in Rio. Indeed, if Bolsonaro’s pledge to banish “marginal
reds” from the country becomes more than empty rhetoric, the coming
administration may take the so-far failed strategy to destroy the PT
into new, more violent terrain.
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