Brazil's Presidential Election Is A Fight For Democracy
'Presidential Election Is A Fight For Democracy In Brazil,' By Mark Weisbrot, Folha De S.Paulo, Truthout, Oct. 7, 2018.
The world is watching Brazils elections, probably as never before. Latin Americas latest menace: Bolsonaro Presidente, screams the headline on the cover of The Economist. This conservative UK magazine would love to see the Workers Party (PT) disappear from Brazilian politics, but even they cannot stomach Bolsonaro, who in 2016 dedicated his vote to impeach President Dilma Rousseff to the colonel responsible for her torture.
Many have made the comparison to Trump, and of course there are similarities ― especially in the overt racism and misogyny of the two politicians. And both owe a large part of their rise to the failure of neoliberal economic policies. But Brazils trajectory to an even more dangerous threat scenario is a right-wing reaction by the countrys traditional, corrupt elite against the PTs positive economic reforms that benefited the vast majority of Brazilians.
By 2014, under the presidencies of Lula and Dilma, poverty had been reduced by 55 percent and extreme poverty by 65 percent, and unemployment hit a record low of 4.9 percent. Some of these gains were lost when the economy then went into a deep recession that year, and the right took advantage of that downturn to seize what it could not win at the ballot box in four consecutive elections.
They impeached Dilma and removed her from office without even accusing her of an actual crime; and then Judge Moro sent Lula to prison for a bribe he never accepted, in a trial without material evidence. The US government sent experts from its Justice Department to help with investigations, and quietly showed support for the removal of Dilma. More...
https://truthout.org/articles/presidential-election-is-a-fight-for-democracy-in-brazil/
People queue to vote during general elections, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on October 7, 2018.