Brazil, new President, Jair Bolsonaro, is yet to complete his first month in office and cracks have started appearing in his eclectic electoral base.
Bolsonaro, a former military officer who was a member of
the Brazilian Congress for nearly three decades without leaving a legislative
trace, rose to prominence last year after securing significant support from
discordant right-wing groups.
From the free market-loving members of the Free Brazil
Movement (MBL) to religious fundamentalists, from the followers of the far-right
"philosopher" and astrologer Olavo de Carvalho to the traditionally
conservative, promilitary interventionists, almost all of Brazil's prominent
right-wing activists united behind the populist politician. Even Integralistas,
a fascist movement founded in Brazil in the 1930s, and the monarchists declared
their support for "Bolsonarism".
Bolsonaro managed to unite groups with such diverse
political, economic and social objectives by promising to fight corruption,
"gender
ideology" and "cultural Marxism". He pledged to
deliver a right-wing utopia - defined by machismo, nationalism, Christian
fundamentalism and aggressive capitalism - but refrained from disclosing
exactly how he was going to bring about this transformation.
Throughout his election campaign, the populist politician
never put forward a detailed economic or foreign policy agenda or explained how
he would fulfil the largely contradictory expectations of the groups that made
his presidency possible.
Now, 30 days into his first term, Bolsonaro still doesn't
seem to have a clear plan of action that would allow him to maintain his
popularity, keep all his supporters happy and change the fortunes of Latin
America's largest economy. As a result, despite favourable opinion polls and a
stock index reaching record highs, the united right-wing base that gave
Bolsonaro the presidency appears to be slowly disintegrating.
Disparate cabinet
After taking office, Bolsonaro immediately made a series of
cabinet appointments to please all the groups that supported his candidacy.
The president made anti-corruption judge Sergio Moro his
justice minister to satisfy those who voted for him with the hope he would end
corruption. He appointed liberal banker Paulo Guedes the economy minister in
line with the demands of the big business lobby.
Bolsonaro gave evangelical pastor Damares Alves the
Ministry of Women, Family and Human Rights to please his most conservative
supporters. He also had right-wing scholar Ricardo Velez Rodriguez
take up the position of minister of education and Ernesto Araujo, a diplomat who believes he is fighting a crusade in defence
of Christianity, become foreign minister to please various other
conservative groups, including de Carvalho's followers.
However, even these strategic appointments could not
stop his electoral base from fracturing and some of his allies from
questioning the president's ability to deliver on his promises.
Contradictory economics
The business circles in Brazil put their support behind the
far-right politician mainly because he promised to revive the country's
"sluggish" economy, pass business-friendly reforms, downsize the
public sector, reduce the fiscal deficit and tackle its unsustainably expensive
pension system.
However, a month into his term, Bolsonaro still has not
presented any details of his proposed economic reforms and policies, which has
causedjitters in the market and a sense of alarm within the
president's inner circle. Moreover, he continues to make controversial and
contradictory statements, leading many to question his commitment to making
Brazil "business friendly".
Only three days after taking office, for example, Bolsonaro
said that he would increase the minimum retirement age to 62 for men and 57
for women - numbers significantly lower than the ones promised by his
predecessor - signalling that he is planning to water down his campaign
promises on radical pension reform.
On the same day, the president also announced that he has
reservations about the planned sale of a stake in local jet-maker Embraer to US
aircraft maker Boeing, causing the value of its stock to plunge by five
percent. Days later, however, his government approved the sale.
In mid-January, Bolsonaro faced a mini ideological
crisis. An official visit of MPs from Bolsonaro's Social Liberal Party to
China angered some of his supporters. While doing business
with China is
good for the big capitalists backing the government, de Carvalho, his
supporters and many others saw that business trip to a communist country as a
"betrayal".
They emphasised the fact that many right-wing Brazilians
voted for Bolsonaro because they believed he would pursue an anti-communist,
right-wing agenda. The president had indeed made his anti-communist stance a
major speaking point during his election campaign, even declaring that he is
supporting US President Donald Trump's trade war against China.
Yet, as much as Bolsonaro admires Trumpism and hates
communism, he can't do away with the fact that China is Brazil's top trading
partner, importing more than twice as much Brazilian goods as the US does. How
the Brazilian president is going to keep his anti-commie and pro-business
supporters happy at the same time is anyone's guess.
Losing the war on corruption before waging it
The widespread public disenchantment over a series of mega
corruption scandals that tarnished two Workers' Party governments was a major
factor that contributed to Bolsonaro's election victory in October.
However, in his first month in office, the new president
has failed to make much progress in the fight against corruption. On the
contrary, Bolsonaro and his family have faced a series of corruption scandals,
leaving many of his supporters disturbed and disillusioned.
An investigation by the Financial Activities Control
Council (COAF) recently unearthed suspicious financial transactions worth hundreds of thousands of dollars made
to the bank accounts of the president's oldest son and elected Senator, Flavio
Bolsonaro, and the first lady, Michelle. The payments were made by Flavio's
former driver Fabricio Queiroz, who claimed that he obtained the money he
transferred to the president's family legally, by selling used cars.
Another series of suspicious cash transfers worth nearly
$30,000 were also made to Flavio's bank account. The COAF report on these
payments showed that 48 payments of 2,000 reais ($531) each were deposited into
his bank account between June and July 2017, when he was a Rio de Janeiro state
legislator.
The report said the origin of the money was unclear, but
the fact that all transfers were made at a bank at Rio's state legislative
assembly, where Flavio worked, made them suspicious. The senator defended
himself by saying the money he deposited was from "the sale of an
apartment".
A 'lower clergy' politician
In light of the corruption scandals surrounding the
Bolsonaro family, the MPs' "ill-advised" trip to China and the
president's apparent lack of vision regarding the future of Brazil's economy,
some of his supporters appear a bit less enthusiastic about his presidency now.
Many of those who had been vocal on social media previously
are staying silent about these mishaps. Some are even saying that they
are ashamed of their vote.
For those of us who saw through Bolsonaro's act last year,
neither the corruption scandals, nor his lack of vision and consistency seems
surprising. After all, he has long been a textbook case of what is known
in Brazil as "lower clergy" (baixo clero): politicians with little
power, vision or clout, motivated not by a desire to influence the future of
the country, but by a determination to stay in office at any cost so as to line
their pockets.
Last year, Bolsonaro took advantage of the people's search
for an alternative to mainstream politicians and the rise of far-right populism
across the globe and managed to catapult himself to the front line of Brazilian
politics. However, now that he is president, he has nothing to offer to the
nation other than corruption, hate speech and empty rhetoric.
Perhaps the fact that he has already started shedding
supporters might spring him into action and get him to finally come up with an
actual plan of how to govern the country and restart the economy. Or perhaps
he'll keep going with his "lower clergy" ways until 2022 or until the
country collapses.
By Raphael Tsavkko Garcìa
https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/bolsonaro-30-days-office-190128184016650.html
https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/bolsonaro-30-days-office-190128184016650.html

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