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Geopolitics

Have No Doubt: Bolsonaro's Fingerprints Are All Over The Brasilia Assault

Emulating the Trump-inspired attack on the U.S. Capitol, the assault of a right-wing mob on government buildings in Brasilia took its cue from former president Bolsonaro's longstanding contempt for democratic institutions.

Photo of Donald Trump and Jair Bolsonaro at Mar a Lago resort in Florida on March 7, 2020​

Back when Trump and Bolsonaro were presidents, at a dinner at Trump's Mar a Lago resort in Florida on March 7, 2020.

Alan Santos/President Brazil/Planet Pix/ZUMA Wire

-Editorial-

In defeat, authoritarianism is unable to reflect, let alone peacefully hand over power. In Brazil, we have just seen the sadly predictable consequences of years of questioning the legitimacy of elections and their institutional guarantors by the departing right-wing president, Jair Bolsonaro.

In an echo of events in Washington on Jan. 6, 2021, thousands of Bolsonaro's supporters stormed the premises of Brazil's Congress, Supreme Court and the offices of his duly-elected successor, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. The similarity with the assault on the U.S. Capitol after the Trump presidency is no coincidence.

Fascist-style regimes copy each other's clumsy, violent and painful methods.


The result is a recurring threat to democracy worldwide.

Power of lies

You could see this one coming. From the first round of voting, won by Lula, supporters of Bolsonaro began filling social media and especially Instagram with claims of fraud. Lula, they claimed, could only have cheated his way to victory.

His team accepted the results — but not Bolsonaro, who kept silent.

Two weeks after the first round, the sitting president said he distrusted the electoral system, repeating without proof that he was about to be robbed of reelection. When he lost the second round, his team accepted the results — but not Bolsonaro, who kept silent. Just days ago, in a farewell speech to Brazilians before leaving for the United States, he said he lacked the support needed "to do something." In other words, he couldn't find a way to overturn the results.

All these lies had their effect. Firstly, Bolsonaro's supporters blocked the country's main highways for weeks. Then they turned to vandalism on Lula's inauguration day. A bomb was found at Brasilia's airport over Christmas.

Then, on Sunday, more than 100 buses arrived at the capital, ostensibly for a peaceful protest - which soon turned into mayhem. Footage showed people trashing public buildings, attacking the few policemen standing on duty and displaying messages demanding a military intervention. Some protesters raised the flag of the Brazilian empire.

photo of a women supporting former Brazilian President Bolsonaro and wearing a Brazilian flag as a cap is crying as she is escorted out a of camp of Bolsonaro supporters and walks in the middle of policemen on horses

A supporter of former Brazilian President Bolsonaro cries during the eviction of a camp of Bolsonaro supporters on Monday in Brasilia.

Isabella Finholdt/dpa/ZUMA Press

Evasion and euphemisms 

Erick Bang reported on the local network GloboNews, that this amounted to a "terrorist attack. The three buildings have been invaded by terrorists who want a coup."

The head of the pro-Bolsonaro Liberal Party, Valdemar Costa Neto, was also clear: "This is a sad day for the Brazilian nation. We do not agree with the destruction of Congress. Disorder has never been one of the nation's principles. We vehemently reject this type of attitude and want the application of the law to strengthen our democracy." Bolsonaro reacted to the incident in more evasive and euphemistic terms.

We can see, again, what happens when political leaders smash democracy's basic pacts for selfish ends. The problem now is that violence will continue in a Brazil facing a deep societal crisis.

But make no mistake, it all happened because Bolsonaro made verbal violence an integral part of his campaign.

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Geopolitics

Yes, Xi Jinping Is Now More Powerful Than Mao Zedong Ever Was

After being re-elected as head of the Communist Party last year, the Chinese leader has been unanimously re-elected to another five-year term as head of state. Now, wielding more power than any other past Chinese communist leader, he wants to accelerate the rise of Chinese influence around the world.

Photo of huge portrait of Xi Jinping

Huge portrait of Xi Jinping is displayed in the National Day mass pageantry celebrating the 70th founding anniversary of the People's Republic of China

Yann Rousseau

-Analysis-

BEIJING — Chinese Communist Party leader Xi Jinping has been re-elected to a third five-year term at the head of the world's second largest economic power. Nobody was surprised.

The vote took place during a legislative assembly convened to rubber stamp decisions of the authoritarian power, during which 2,952 parliamentarians unanimously approved Xi's re-election before rising, in perfect choreography, to offer a prolonged standing ovation to their leader. As usual, Xi remained completely neutral in the face of the enthusiasm.

His victory was a mere formality after his re-election last fall as the head of the all-powerful party, which controls all of the country's political institutions, and after legislative amendments to erase term limits that would have forced him out.

Xi Jinping, who took over the presidency in 2013, "is now the most powerful leader in the history of the People's Republic, since its founding in 1949. Institutionally, he holds even more power than Mao Zedong," says Suisheng Zhao, a professor and Chinese foreign policy expert at the University of Denver.

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