Brazils democracy in peril Bolsonaros military courtship raises concern
Brazilâs President Jair Bolsonaro looked on approvingly earlier this month as armored vehicles snaked through the nationâs capital. But his military parade was controversial for its timing on the eve of a vote in Congress about election security in 2022 and for the signal it sends about Mr. Bolsonaroâs increasingly close ties to Brazilâs armed forces.
Having weathered the first year of a pandemic that Brazil is widely seen as mismanaging, Mr. Bolsonaro has seen his popularity fall to new lows this summer. As angry Brazilians take to the streets â" at times calling for impeachment â" heâs turned to sowing doubt about the trustworthiness of the 2022 presidential vote, echoing the strategy of President Trump in whipping up a disgruntled base.
These moves are calling into question the stability and independence of Brazilâs democratic institutions. They also represent a risky political calculation that could alienate moderates whose votes elevated Mr. Bolsonaro, a fringe far-right congressman, to the presidency in 2018. âBolsonaro is weaker than heâs ever been â" and he is throwing all his cards on the table,â says Marjorie Marona, a political science professor at the Federal University of Minas Gerais.
Why We Wrote ThisBrazil's calamitous handling of COVID-19 has hurt President Jair Bolsonaro's prospect of being reelected. His defiant response and courtship of the military has raised fears of democratic backsliding.
Rio de Janeiro
A line of military tanks rolled through the heart of Brazilâs capital on a recent morning, enveloped by a cloud of black exhaust smoke. From the marble steps of the presidential palace, President Jair Bolsonaro looked on approvingly.
The Aug. 10 military parade, unprecedented since Brazilâs 1985 return to democracy, came just hours before lawmakers voted on the far-right presidentâs proposal to bring back paper ballots, a proposal that critics say is aimed at discrediting Brazilâs electronic voting machines. Mr. Bolsonaro is seeking a second term in next yearâs presidential election.
The parade, which drew criticism domestically and abroad, was seen as a not-so-subtle attempt at intimidating lawmakers. In that regard, it failed: Congress rejected the proposal. But it forms part of a pattern that has raised questions over Brazilâs democratic health.
Why We Wrote ThisBrazil's calamitous handling of COVID-19 has hurt President Jair Bolsonaro's prospect of being reelected. His defiant response and courtship of the military has raised fears of democratic backsliding.
As COVID-19 continues to ravage Brazil and its stricken economy, Mr. Bolsonaroâs popularity has tumbled to new lows in recent months. Angry Brazilians have taken to the streets to call for his impeachment. The president, a former army captain, has responded by attacking other branches of government, sowing doubts over election security, and flaunting his increasingly cozy relationship with the armed forces.
âBolsonaro is weaker than heâs ever been â" and he is throwing all his cards on the table,â says Marjorie Marona, a political scientist at the Federal University of Minas Gerais. âItâs a show of strength,â but itâs coming from a place of âdesperation,â she says.
Military wildcardCOVID-19 has killed 578,000 people in Brazil, a toll second only to the United States. Mr. Bolsonaro has repeatedly brushed off the severity of the health crisis, rejecting sanitary measures like face masks, social distancing, and lockdowns. His government also slashed emergency aid this year to millions of workers, an unpopular move.
In televised hearings, a parliamentary inquiry has dissected Mr. Bolsonaroâs handling of the pandemic, including a stream of corruption allegations that have tarnished his image as an anti-graft crusader. This includes an alleged kickback scheme in which his government sought to buy millions of COVID-19 vaccines at sharply inflated prices.
Only 23% of Brazilians believe Mr. Bolsonaro is doing a good or great job, according to an August poll by XP/Ipespe.
Mr. Bolsonaroâs courtship of Brazilâs military has fueled worries that heâs trying to rile up his core supporters and lay the groundwork for a coup if he loses next yearâs election. While recent challenges to election results in the United States and Peru didnât succeed, some experts say Brazilâs young democracy is more vulnerable.
âThe risk here is greater,â says Camila Rocha, a political scientist who has studied right-wing voters and Mr. Bolsonaroâs supporters. âSizable segments of the Armed Forces support Bolsonaro.â
Walter Souza Braga Netto, an army general and Brazilâs minister of defense, has denied that this monthâs parade was intended to intimidate lawmakers. âThe president considered it an homage. Because he is a president who honors the Armed Forces,â he said.
Adriano Machado/Reuters
Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro looks on during a Soldier's Day ceremony, in Brasilia, Brazil, Aug. 25, 2021. Mr. Bolsonaro, a former army officer, has cast doubt on election security ahead of next year's presidential poll.
Mr. Bolsonaro has said he wonât accept the election results if he sees the vote as fraudulent. He recently threatened to cancel the elections altogether if the voting system is not fixed, despite no evidence of fraud in past elections. âNext yearâs elections have to be clean,â he declared last month. âEither weâll have clean elections, or we wonât have elections.â
Mr. Bolsonaro has attacked Brazilâs Supreme Court, which is investigating the presidentâs role in spreading false information about the electoral process. He filed a lawsuit against the Supreme Court and even sought to impeach one of its judges, though the Senate shot down his requests last week.
The central question is whether the military will stand by Mr. Bolsonaro. Earlier this year, the chiefs of Brazilâs army, navy, and air force jointly resigned, allegedly in protest of Mr. Bolsonaroâs attempts to exert undue control over them. Their replacements have closer ties to the president.
Mr. Bolsonaro has appointed thousands of former and current military officers to top government posts. At least 6,100 staff members in his administration have a military background, more than double the number under his conservative predecessor, Michel Temer.
âWe already know that Bolsonaro doesnât have limits,â says João Roberto Martins Filho, a political science professor at the Federal University of São Carlos and author of several books on Brazilâs military dictatorship. âWhat we still donât know is how far the armed forces will go.â
Thereâs cautious optimism among academics that the military will remain loyal to the countryâs democratic institutions and that these bodies can remain independent and strong enough to resist any electoral foul play. But Dr. Martins Filho warns that the military could resist a return to the political margins. âThey will want to stay in power,â he says.
And public faith in institutions has been shaken by years of corruption scandals, says Dr. Marona. This mistrust, which also applies to the electoral process, could play into the hands of a strongman like Mr. Bolsonaro.
The situation âhas only amplified this sense of not being represented, that democratic institutions donât function well, that all politicians are corrupt,â she says.
Adriano Machado/Reuters
A demonstrator takes part in a protest against President Jair Bolsonaro's government outside the National Congress in Brasilia, Brazil, Aug. 18, 2021. Mr. Bolsonaro's approval ratings have slumped in recent months as poverty and hunger have grown during the pandemic.
Broken spell?Mr. Bolsonaroâs assaults on democratic institutions are not new. During his 26 years in Congress, he often lamented the limits of democracy, waxed nostalgic about military dictatorship, and fantasized about shutting down Congress, calling it a system that âdoesnât work.â
âThis discourse has always been Bolsonaroâs signature, and it was crucial to his election,â says Dr. Martins Filho. âHe presents himself as an outsider by questioning institutions.â
Mr. Bolsonaro won over moderate voters in 2018 by promising to kick-start the economy. And his pledges to get tough on crime resonated in a country with one of the worldâs highest rates of violent crime. An outsider status gave him a leg up, too: Brazilians were disillusioned after more than a decade of leftist Workersâ Party (PT) leadership.
Mr. Bolsonaroâs reliance on moves like the military parade may be alienating this more moderate demographic. âBolsonaro has this core base thatâs really loyal,â says Dr. Rocha. But trying to radicalize his base with claims of electoral meddling by opponents is âa big gambleâ if it turns off moderates.
VinÃcius Pedrada Coutinho says he voted for the president in the 2018 election runoff because he was an appealing alternative to the PT. He was drawn to Mr. Bolsonaroâs vows to put the economy back on track, but last month he lost his job as a supervisor at an appliance company.
âWe were looking for a political renewal,â says Mr. Coutinho. âWe were hoping for a new economic era. But he didnât deliver on any of his promises.â
Gean Perreira Santos, a security guard in Brasilia, the capital, says his concerns go further. âHe seemed like an authentic guy who spoke his mind,â he says of casting his ballot for Mr. Bolsonaro. Now, âIt seems like what he really wanted all along wasâ to stay in power.
With former President Luiz Inácio âLulaâ da Silva â" a divisive but still wildly popular figure â" now free to run in next yearâs elections, Mr. Bolsonaroâs position is even more fragile.
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Just 24% of Brazilians say they would vote for Mr. Bolsonaro in the first round of elections next year, according to the XP/Ipespe poll. Some 40% say they would cast a ballot for Mr. da Silva. Others say they donât like either choice.
If there is no strong third option, Mr. Coutinho says he will spoil his vote. âI donât want to be responsible for Bolsonaro winning another term, I canât have that on my conscience. But I also donât believe in voting for the lesser of two evils.â
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