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#THE BOLSONARO’S ERA
MARKED BY STRONG SUPPORT BY ALLIED COUNTRIES AND BRAZILIAN SOCIAL MOVEMENTS DURING INAUGURATION
POLITICAL COMMENT
The New Brazilian Government that took office on January 1 of this year is constituted in the first government rank of Bolsonaro with an exceptional team to promote the changes that both Brazil needs. The Ministries' briefcases are composed of the highest level of feedback from the technical point of view and from experience in the respective areas in which they will work.
But President Bolsonaro will have to have a Congress (Federal Senate and House of Representatives) that at least has a certain approximation and sympathy with the projects with which he intends to implement his measures of changes, these projects of medium and long term and that do not would be sufficient, legally, to be adopted by Decrees or Provisional Measures.
To all that it demonstrates, publicly, the Chamber of Deputies will be aligned with the New Government in the figure of the present Mayor of the House and that has the pretension to maintain the position. Rodrigo Maia waves with affection to the Federal Government, as long as he can continue in the Presidency of the Chamber of Deputies. President Bolsonaro does not put obstacles in his way, since he knows that he will have, and has had almost 30 years of experience in the Parliament House, that he will make many negotiations, as long as they are not spurious, so that his Government does not encounter any significant obstacles among the Federal Deputies .
It seems the whole difficulty will be in the Federal Senate. Where the main cunning more than vulpine /foxlike, and the main one of them, Renan Calheiros, have the pretension to compete for the Presidency of the Federal Senate. And the most astute fox, Renan, may have the preference because he holds sway over many senators. President Bolsonaro will have to mobilize his team so that it is not left to the mercy of petty conchavos, whose policy adopted behind the scenes of the National Congress has contributed to bring Brazil into political and economic misfortunes as never seen before.
Coordinator of “The Amethyst Communication”
==//==
COMENTÁRIO POLÍTICO
O Novo Governo que tomou posse no dia 1º de janeiro do presente ano está constituído no primeiro escalão com um time excepcional para promover as mudanças de que tanto o Brasil precisa. As pastas dos Ministérios estão compostas de titulares do mais alto gabarito, do ponto de vista técnico e de experiências nas respectivas áreas nas quais atuarão.
Mas o Presidente Bolsonaro terá que contar com um Congresso (Senado Federal e Câmara dos Deputados) que ao menos tenha uma certa aproximação e simpatia com os projetos com os quais pretende implantar suas medidas de mudanças, projetos esses de médio e longo prazos e que não seria suficiente, juridicamente, serem adotados por Decretos ou Medidas Provisórias.
Ao que tudo demonstra, publicamente, a Câmara dos Deputados estará alinhada com o Novo Governo na figura do atual Presidente da Câmara e que tem a pretensão de se manter no cargo. Rodrigo Maia acena com afagos ao Governo Federal, desde que possa continuar na Presidência da Câmara dos Deputados. O Presidente Bolsonaro não coloca empecilhos para sua permanência, pois sabe que terá, e tem experiência de quase 30 anos na Casa Parlamentar, que fazer muitas negociações, desde que não sejam espúrias, para que seu Governo não encontre obstáculos de peso entre os Deputados Federais.
Parece que a dificuldade toda será no Senado Federal. Velhas raposas, e a principal delas, Renan Calheiros, têm a pretensão de concorrer à Presidência do Senado Federal. E a raposa mais astuta, Renan, pode ter a preferência porque detém influência em muitos senadores. O Presidente Bolsonaro terá que mobilizar sua equipe para que não fique à mercê de conchavos mesquinhos, cuja política adotada nos bastidores do Congresso Nacional contribuiu para levar o Brasil em descaminhos políticos e econômicos como nunca vistos.
Gilberto Martins Borges Filho
Coordenador de “The Amethyst Communication”
==//==
The Americas
With Jair Bolsonaro’s inauguration, Brazil moves sharply to the right
Brazil's Bolsonaro takes presidential oath of office
0:02 / 1:50
Jair Bolsonaro, 63, was sworn in as Brazil's 38th president on Jan. 1 at Brazil's National Congress Building. (Reuters)
By Ellis Rua ,
Marina Lopes and
January 1
BRASILIA — Jair Bolsonaro, a former army captain who has promised radical measures to cut soaring crime and widespread corruption, was sworn in as Brazil’s president Tuesday, marking the nation’s starkest shift to the right since its return to democracy three decades ago.
Bolsonaro, 63, became the world’s latest politician to reach the presidency by riding a populist revolt against the governing class. He has pledged to take South America’s largest nation in a new direction, adopting an iron-fisted approach to crime and promoting more development in the environmentally sensitive Amazon rain forest. An ardent admirer of President Trump, Bolsonaro has vowed to move Brazil away from its left-leaning foreign policy.
“I invite all of Congress to join me in the mission to restore and rebuild our homeland, liberating it from corruption, crime, economic irresponsibility and ideological traps,” he said after being sworn in.
With Bolsonaro’s inauguration, Latin America’s two biggest economies are now in the hands of anti-establishment populists. Andrés Manuel López Obrador, a leftist, took office in Mexico on Dec. 1. But while he built a reputation as a pragmatist when he served as mayor of Mexico City, the new Brazilian leader appears more unpredictable.
Bolsonaro is sworn in before Congress. (Nelson Almeida/AFP/Getty Images)
Bolsonaro is a strong supporter of the military regime that ruled Brazil from 1964 to 1985 and is the most conservative ruler to come to power in the region in decades. His vice president and several key ministers are former military officers. Lawmakers who support the new president greeted him Tuesday by pointing their fingers in the shape of a gun.
The new president repeatedly emphasized his commitment to democracy Tuesday.
In his speech to Congress, Bolsonaro promised to reduce bureaucratic regulations and promote a more free-market economic policy. He hinted that he would try to loosen gun laws, saying, “A good citizen deserves methods of defending himself.”
That move, though, could be challenged by Congress. Even more difficult may be injecting steam into the sluggish Brazilian economy, which analysts say will require broad austerity measures. And Bolsonaro will need to mediate among the country’s three dozen political parties.
“His government will be judged based on the economy and corruption, issues that take time to fix. But he can act on security fast, and that will give his electorate the impression that things have changed,” said Mauricio Santoro, a political science professor at the State University of Rio de Janeiro.
During the campaign, Bolsonaro suggested that he may support giving police officers license to kill on the job by protecting them from murder charges. While that would require major changes to Brazilian law, many fear that even raising the idea could exacerbate an already serious problem of police brutality.
Supporters take pictures as Bolsonaro drives past before his swearing-in ceremony. (Ricardo Moraes/Reuters)
Tens of thousands of people filled Brasilia’s Praca dos Tres Poderes, a massive lawn akin to the Mall in Washington, for Bolsonaro’s first presidential speech to the public Tuesday afternoon.
The government launched a huge security operation, mobilizing more than 3,000 police officers, firefighters and soldiers. During the campaign, Bolsonaro was wounded by a knife-wielding assailant, and he takes office at a moment when the country is deeply polarized.
Many Brazilians oppose Bolsonaro because of his history of incendiary statements — he has insulted women and minorities and said he would prefer a dead son to a gay one. On Tuesday, the new president emphasized in his congressional speech his “commitment to building a society without discrimination or division.” But later, addressing the public, Bolsonaro proclaimed that the era of “political correctness” was over.
He held up a Brazilian flag and chanted along with the crowd: “Our flag will never be red” — a reference to communism.
For Bolsonaro, “there is a need to maintain a sense of polarization because that was the platform that got him elected,” said Alexandre Bandeira, a political strategist in Brasilia. “We are seeing a government formed in opposition to a party,” the leftist Workers’ Party, which dominated Brazilian politics from 2003 to 2016.
The Workers’ Party boycotted the ceremony. Its leader, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, a darling of the global left for his progressive welfare policies, is in prison fighting a corruption conviction. The party was resoundingly defeated in the October election, with many citizens blaming it for a devastating recession from which Brazil is only now emerging.
Among them was Lorena Abdaba, 32, a professor who traveled 33 hours by bus from her native state of Espirito Santo to attend the inauguration. She said Bolsonaro represented a historic moment for her country — a moment she couldn’t miss.
“I also came to watch the official exit of the Workers’ Party from the presidency,” she said.
A few miles away, 19-year-old college student Grace Kelly Silveira waited at a bus station as Bolsonaro supporters poured through the terminal, cheering as they waved Brazilian flags.
“I think he is too radical,” she said.
She cast a blank ballot in the election, saying she couldn’t vote for the Workers’ Party because of its corruption scandals.
In foreign policy, Bolsonaro has signaled that he plans major changes and that he may follow Trump’s lead on some issues. For example, he has threatened to pull out of the Paris climate accord and said he will relocate Brazil’s embassy in Israel to Jerusalem from Tel Aviv.
[Making Brazil great again: How Jair Bolsonaro mirrors and courts Trump]
Trump congratulated the new Brazilian leader, writing in a tweet: “The U.S.A. is with you!”
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo flew to Brasilia for the inauguration, as did Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Meanwhile, the incoming Brazilian government rescinded invitations to the inauguration that had been sent to Cuban and Venezuelan leaders, traditional allies of the Workers’ Party.
Like Trump, Bolsonaro won the presidency after a campaign fueled by popular anger. Many Brazilians were wary of established politicians after a multibillion-dollar corruption scandal linked to the national oil company wound up tainting vast swaths of the country’s political elite.
Bolsonaro spent nearly three decades in Congress. But as a fringe legislator, he was one of the few to emerge unscathed from the scandals.
He replaces Michel Temer, who leaves the presidency with the worst approval ratings in Brazilian history.
Lopes reported from Miami. Sheridan reported from Mexico City. Carol Morello in Washington contributed to this report.
Read more
Who is Jair Bolsonaro, the man likely to be Brazil’s next president?
Brazil shed a military dictatorship. Now it looks again toward iron-fisted rule.
How Jair Bolsonaro entranced Brazil’s minorities — while also insulting them
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Marina Lopes Marina Lopes is the Washington Post's Brazil correspondent. Before joining the paper she reported for Reuters in Mozambique, New York, and Washington D.C. She holds a master's degree in journalism from Columbia University. Follow
Mary Beth Sheridan Mary Beth Sheridan is a correspondent covering Mexico and Central America for The Washington Post. Her previous foreign postings include Rome; Bogota, Colombia; and a five-year stint in Mexico in the 1990s. She has also covered immigration, homeland security and diplomacy for The Post, and served as deputy foreign editor from 2016 to 2018. Follow
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Jair Bolsonaro
Bolsonaro declares Brazil's 'liberation from socialism' as he is sworn in
Far-right populist invited lawmakers to help country free itself from ‘ideological submission’ in speech
• Jair Bolsonaro’s inauguration: the day progressive Brazil has dreaded
Dom Phillips in Brasília
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Tue 1 Jan 2019 19.40 GMT Last modified on Thu 3 Jan 2019 14.26 GMT
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Jair Bolsonaro waves before his swearing-in ceremony in Brasília, Brazil, on 1 January. Photograph: Ricardo Moraes/Reuters
Jair Bolsonaro has announced Brazil’s “liberation from socialism, inverted values, the bloated state and political correctness” after being sworn in as the country’s 42nd president.
His words delighted a crowd of more than 100,000 – many of whom had travelled to its modernist capital for the event, convinced the far-right populist can rescue their troubled country from virulent corruption, rising violent crime and economic doldrums.
The former army captain and his wife Michelle waved to crowds from an open-topped Rolls-Royce before he and his vice-president, retired army general Hamilton Mourão, were sworn in at congress.
Woman who Bolsonaro insulted: 'Our president-elect encourages rape'
Read more
In a brief speech to the chamber of deputies, Bolsonaro thanked God for surviving from a near-fatal knife attack during the election campaign and invited lawmakers to help Brazil free itself from “corruption, criminality and economic irresponsibility and ideological submission”.
“We have a unique opportunity before us to reconstruct our country and rescue the hope of our compatriots,” he said. “We are going to unite the people, rescue the family, respect religions and our Judeo-Christian tradition, combat gender ideology, conserving our values.”
He also referred to campaign promises such as freeing up gun possession. “Good citizens deserve the means to defend themselves,” he said. Bolsonaro said he was counting on congress support to provide “legal support” for police to do their work; he has promised impunity for police who kill criminals. “They deserve it and must be respected,” he said.
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Jair Bolsonaro in Brasília, Brazil, on 1 January. Photograph: Pilar Olivares/Reuters
Bolsonaro has enjoyed the support of Brazil’s powerful agribusiness sector, which he said will have an “increase in efficiency” with “less bureaucracy” – words which will alarm environmentalists and indigenous activists concerned by his plans to streamline environmental licensing and allow commercial mining and farming on protected indigenous reserves.
These fears seem justified, in one of his first acts as president, just hours after being sworn in, Bolsonaro took the power to identify and demarcate indigenous reserves from the National Indian Foundation (Funai), giving it to the ministry of agriculture, according to local media reports.
He also took aim at the leftist Workers’ party he has painted as communists responsible for all Brazil’s ills, from crime to corruption.
“Irresponsibility conducted us to the worst ethical, moral and economic crisis in our history,” he said.
'Gender ideology': big, bogus and coming to a fear campaign near you
Gillian Kane
Read more
Minutes afterwards, Donald Trump tweeted that Bolsonaro had made a “great inauguration speech”, adding: “The U.S.A is with you!”
Shortly afterwards, Bolsonaro’s Twitter account replied: “Dear Mr. President @realDonaldTrump, I truly appreciate your words of encouragement. Together, under God’s protection, we shall bring prosperity and progress to our people.”
Bolsonaro, a former army captain who served seven undistinguished terms as a member of Brazil’s lower house, was until this year regarded as a marginal figure known for his outbursts against leftists and LGBT people. He rode a wave of righteous anger to power provoked by sweeping corruption scandals and economic recession that Bolsonaro blamed on the leftist Workers’ party that ran Brazil for 13 years.
In an aggressive and deeply polarised campaign that made adept use of social media, Bolsonaro focused attacks leftist former presidents Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva – currently serving a prison sentence for graft – and his successor Dilma Rousseff, impeached in 2016 for breaking budget rules.
Jair Bolsonaro takes office as Brazil’s president – in pictures
Bolsonaro’s election victory marks a dramatic swing to the right for Brazil, which from 1964 to 1985 was run by a military dictatorship that its new president has expressed support for.
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Jair Bolsonaro's provocative views in six clips – video
The inauguration took place under the tightest security seen in decades. Crowds of supporters passed through three checkpoints, including metal detectors. The new government said 115,000 people attended – many fewer than the half a million expected. As they sang and chanted, firemen sprayed some with water to alleviate the muggy heat.
Many of the groups who travelled across country wore matching T-shirts and hats emblazoned with Bolsonaro’s photo and name. About 80 bikers had come from Fortaleza in the north-east.
“He is the man who will wake this country up, said Francisco Siqueira, 64, a retired army lieutenant who organised pro-Bolsonaro campaign parades of bikers. “Brazilians will be proud when they travel abroad.”
Lawyer Eliana Rabello, 41, had flown from Colatina in Espírito Santo state with 12 family members, including husband Marcelo, 42, a public servant and their daughter Mariana, 7 – all wearing Bolsonaro baseball caps. They had been campaigning for Bolsonaro from the beginning. “We saw he was the guy who was hope for Brazil,” she said, playing down his extremist comments such as threatening a “cleansing” of leftists as “hot blood”.
But to deliver on his radical campaign promises and return Brazil to economic growth will require doing deals with the mercenary congress, analysts said – something he has sworn he will not do.
Traditionally Brazilian presidents offer ministerial jobs to members of a coalition of parties in return for support – there are more than 30 parties in congress, none of which has a clear majority. “That’s how the game is played,” said David Fleischer, emeritus professor of political science at the University of Brasília and a veteran observer of Brazilian politics.
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The system was blamed for corruption scandals in the leftist governments of Lula and Dilma Rousseff – and cleaning up Brazil’s graft problem is one of Bolsonaro’s central campaign promises. Instead of “pork barrel” dealing, he plans to lean on the support of cross-party, issue-based blocks in congress formed of lawmakers who are evangelical Christians or linked to agribusiness and the arms lobby.
“I’m not sure that’s going to work,” said Fleischer. If Bolsonaro wants to get an overhaul of Brazil’s pension system through congress – something his predecessor Michel Temer failed to do – and reform financial markets regard as key to reducing a soaring deficit, Bolsonaro will need to bargain, he said. “It’s sit down and negotiate,” he said.
All that is yet to come. For now, Bolsonaro is riding a wave of enthusiasm from conservative Brazilians who identify with his promise to return their country to a traditional past. “It’s like a pendulum,” said Elias Figueira, 57, an Uber driver from Rio, “from Marxism back to the right.”
In a poll published on Tuesday, 65% of Brazilians said they expected his government to be “good or great”.
In a second speech delivered from the presidential headquarters after receiving the presidential sash from outgoing president Temer, Bolsonaro said Brazilians could now “dream of a better life”.
“We are going to re-establish order in this country,” he said.
He and Mourão held up a Brazilian flag. “It will only turn red if our blood is needed to keep it green and yellow,” he said.
The crowds cheered, waved flags and celebrated the hope that Brazil – the perennial country of the future – might find its destiny by heading back into its past.
• This article was amended on 3 January 2013 to correct a mistranslation of the phrase “gender ideology” in Bolsonaro’s speech to Brazil’s chamber of deputies.
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Começa a Era Bolsonaro
Veio pra mudar, mas será que vai dar certo?
Por Ruy Fabiano
access_time 29 dez 2018, 08h00
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ELE SIM - Em defesa do ex-capitão, apoiadores resgataram o verde e amarelo das manifestações de 2015 (Carl de Souza/AFP)
O governo Jair Bolsonaro, entre tantas indagações e perplexidades, oferece ao menos uma certeza: veio para mudar. Se triunfará, é outra história, que começa daqui a dois dias.
Não lhe falta lastro popular: segundo o Ibope, inicia-se sob as expectativas otimistas de nada menos que 75% da população.
Não é pouco – e é surpreendente, já que se elegeu com 59% dos votos válidos, o que significa que ou as urnas se equivocaram ou 16% dos que votaram no PT mudaram de ideia dois meses após o segundo turno, não obstante o radicalismo que marcou a campanha.
Como não há registro físico dos votos, nunca se saberá.
O que importa é que o anseio por mudança, que começou a se exteriorizar em 2013, numa sucessão de gigantescas manifestações de rua em todo o país – e que desaguou, em 2016, no impeachment de Dilma Roussef -, foi por ele capitalizado.
As mesmas multidões voltaram a se manifestar em sua campanha, sobretudo após o atentado de que foi vítima.
O fenômeno Bolsonaro não é obra individual. Ele tornou-se estuário do clamor popular por ruptura com a (des)ordem vigente, que o impeachment não aplacou. Ao contrário, intensificou.
Michel Temer, o estepe de Dilma, mesmo conseguindo a façanha de fazer com que o país parasse de piorar, não serenou o quadro. Entrega um país um pouco melhor que o que recebeu, mas, no plano moral, manteve o padrão, exposto pela Lava Jato.
Ele e Dilma, entre outros companheiros da parceria PT-MDB, devem se reencontrar em breve nos tribunais.
Desde a retomada do poder pelos civis, a partir de 1985, o país passou a seguir uma agenda de fundamentação esquerdista, em conluio com o mais deslavado fisiologismo, levado ao paroxismo a partir dos governos do PT. Não podia dar certo – e não deu.
A soma de corrupção com gestão temerária tornou-se insustentável e levou o país à ruína. À exceção do breve interstício do Plano Real, que o PT liquidou, o país patinou, entre um governo e outro, na instabilidade econômica, política, social e institucional.
A Lava Jato submeteu os três Poderes a um strip-tease moral sem precedentes. O saldo é eloquente: 14 milhões de desempregados, déficit orçamentário de R$ 150 bilhões, mais de 60 mil homicídios anuais, índice de guerra civil. Entre outras coisas.
O resultado foi a eleição de alguém que, ao longo de todo esse processo, foi o contraponto ideológico mais veemente aos sucessivos governos, com ênfase aos do PT. A princípio, era uma voz periférica, a bradar da tribuna do baixo clero da Câmara, sem audiência do grande público, ao qual só chegava de forma caricatural, nos momentos (não poucos) em que se excedia em sua retórica.
Gradualmente, porém, com a deterioração da cúpula política, passou a ser ouvido, valendo-se da intermediação das redes sociais, já que a mídia convencional o ignorou até onde pôde.
Importa dizer que a sociedade, em sua maioria, viu (e vê) nele um corpo estranho ao ecossistema político vigente, e em condições de mudá-lo. A montagem ministerial, não obstante controvérsias pontuais, foi bem avaliada, segundo o Ibope.
Os próprios adversários já admitem que não será fácil reverter o processo que se inicia. José Dirceu previu que “a Era Bolsonaro será longa”. E Fernando Haddad já declarou que o projeto liberal do novo governo “pode dar certo”. Admitir, porém, não significa se conformar.
O PT retoma sua maior habilidade: a de força predadora. Fará (já está fazendo) oposição sistemática.
Terá, porém, contra si a Lava Jato robustecida, cujo símbolo, Sérgio Moro, deixa a modesta primeira instância de Curitiba para assumir a cabine de comando do Ministério da Justiça.
O Brasil que se inicia, mesclando tecnocratas, militares, políticos e neófitos, terá múltiplos desafios e enfrentará turbulências. Terá de aprender a trocar o pneu com o carro andando.
De tédio, com certeza, não padeceremos. Apertem o cinto – a viagem vai começar.
Ruy Fabiano é jornalista
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