Bolsonaro is turning back the clock on Brazil, says Lula da Silva
Brazil’s former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva
has vowed to spearhead opposition to the country’s far-right leader Jair
Bolsonaro, warning that his country is backsliding on years of hard fought
progress.
“Bolsonaro has already made clear what he wants for
Brazil: he wants to destroy all of the democratic and social conquests from the
last decades,” he told the Guardian.
In his first interview for a foreign newspaper since
he was released from prison two weeks ago, the two-term president said his
mission now was to “battle for democracy”.
“The Worker’s party is preparing to come back and
govern this country!” he said, slapping the table. But Lula made no clear
indication he would run for president in the country’s next general elections.
“In 2022, I’ll be 77. The Catholic church – with
2,000 years of experience – retires its bishops at 75,” he said.
The former union leader, who was born into barefoot
poverty in Brazil’s semi-arid back lands, strolled into his Worker’s party’s
headquarters in São Paulo’s gritty downtown, greeting a dozen people with
handshakes or kisses.
Nearly forty years after leading metalworker strikes
in São Paulo’s industrial suburbs during Brazil’s military dictatorship, Lula’s
energy and passion for politics remain astonishing.
But he pulled few punches when talking about
Bolsonaro – an outspoken supporter of Brazil’s military dictatorship and an
admirer of Chile’s Pinochet as well as modern day authoritarian leaders such as
Hungary’s Viktor Orbán.
“Let’s hope that Bolsonaro doesn’t destroy Brazil.
Let’s hope he does something good for the country… but I doubt that,” he said.
The former president expressed dismay at alleged
links between Bolsonaro and organized crime.
Sine the murder last year of Marielle Franco, a
popular Rio de Janeiro councilwoman, several photos have emerged of the
president posing with suspects in the killing, who are allegedly linked to
shadowy paramilitary gangs.
“Once, talking about paramilitaries was a rare thing
… today, we see the president surrounded by paramilitaries,” he said.
And it’s not only national politics where Bolsonaro
is going wrong, Lula said.
“His submission to Trump and the US … is really
embarrassing” he said.
Lula’s opinion is shared by a generation of
diplomats disgusted by the damage being inflicted on Brazil’s soft power status
under Bolsonaro’s foreign minister Ernesto Araújo who believes climate change
is Marxist plot.
“Brazil’s image is negative right now. We have a
president who doesn’t govern, who sits discussing fake news twenty-four hours a
day,” he said. “Brazil has to have a role on the international stage.”
“Brazil’s image is negative right now. We have a
president who doesn’t govern,” Lula said
Lula said he was “excited” to see left-leaning
leaders back in office Argentina and in Mexico but was deeply saddened by the
current crisis in Bolivia, where Evo Morales resigned under pressure amid
allegations of voting fraud.
“My friend Evo made a mistake by trying for a fourth
term as president,” he said. “But what they did with him was a crime. It was a
coup – this is terrible for Latin America.”
Lula spent 580 days in prison on controversial
corruption charges he always claimed were politically motivated to stop him
from running in 2018’s elections.
Recent leaked conversations appeared to show Sergio
Moro – the judge who convicted him – colluding with Lula’s prosecutors. Moro
went on to join Bolsonaro’s government as justice minister.
“I hope one
day that Moro is tried for the lies he told,” Lula said.
Lula said that he was able to survive detention
thanks to dozens of supporters who camped outside the police headquarters in
the city of Curitiba where he was held.
“I left prison with a bigger heart … Because of the
activists I didn’t get bitter inside,” he said.
After his release, Lula addressed tens of thousands
of supporters in Recife in the Workers’ party stronghold region of
north-eastern Brazil. Another event this Friday in São Paulo was cancelled at
the last minute due to bad weather but many more rallies are planned next year.
Lula left office in 2011 with a near 90% approval
rating, having overseen a remarkable eight-year period of growth and social
inclusion in one of the world’s most violent and unequal countries.
But his time in office was also tainted by a string
of major corruption scandals which ensnared figures from across the political
spectrum – and cleared the way for the rise of the far-right.
Bolsonaro, formerly a fringe figure, swept to power
amid a perfect storm of economic downturn and political crisis, after Lula was
imprisoned.
“I regret
that Brazil is becoming a country where spreading hate is becoming part of
people’s daily lives,” Lula said.
FacebookTwitterPinterest “I regret that Brazil is
becoming a country where spreading hate is becoming part of people’s daily
lives,” Lula said. Photograph: Andre Lucas/The Guardian
“No one predicted Bolsonaro’s election – not even
him,” said Lula.
The years leading up to 2018’s bitterly fought
election – during which Bolsonaro was stabbed on the campaign trail by a
mentally ill man – were marked by increasing polarization.
“I regret that Brazil is becoming a country where
spreading hate is becoming part of people’s daily lives,” Lula said.
“I’m a Corinthians supporter. But I can’t fight with
a Palmeiras fan – I have to learn to live with him,” he added, using the rivalry
of two of Sao Paulo’s biggest teams to illustrate how “people have to accept
and respect each other’s differences”.
He dismissed claims that by returning to the
political battleground he could further polarize the situation.
“People voted for Bolsonaro, in the main, because
Lula wasn’t a candidate,” he said. “The best way to regain these people’s vote
is to talk to them a lot.”
His Worker’s Party, while embattled and tarnished by
scandal, remains the most popular party in Brazil by quite a margin.
But it’s also the most rejected – after Bolsonaro’s
former PSL party – with as many as 40% of people polled saying they would never
vote for Lula’s party.
“Of course,” Lula chuckles. “But people talk more
about Pele than the other players.”