Time Sep

(Jeff_L) #1

62 TIMESeptember 3–10 2018


had to be done” Bolsonaro says. “Chile
went forward. So much so that Pinochet
has always been respected there.”


DESPITE BOLSONARO’Sprior support
for military rule analysts agree that
a coup is unlikely in Brazil. But few
believe the country would be unafected
by a Bolsonaro presidency. “[It] would be
revolutionary for contemporary Brazilian
society” says Jefrey Lesser director of the
Halle Institute for Global Research and
Learning at Emory University. “There is
little doubt that if elected he would seek
to diminish checks and balances.”
Bolsonaro has pledged to aggres-
sively strengthen law and order in a
country where a record 63880 people
were murdered last year a rate some
six times as high as in the U.S. He says
he wants to loosen gun-control laws and
give police more power to kill suspects in
“self-defense.” He adds “Nobody wants
to let a cop kill but I want to give him
carte blanche not to die.” Some might
say Brazilian police already kill with
impunity: they were responsible for


5144 deaths in 2017; most were young
black males. 367 police were also killed.
The high murder rate in Brazil has
been driven by drug crime an area
where Bolsonaro favors a heavy-handed
approach. He says Philippine President
Duterte responsible for thousands of ex-
trajudicial executions in his war on drugs
“did the right thing for his country.” If
Brazil reached a similar level of violence
he says “you’d have to take action.”
He would also govern as a social
conservative and LGBT groups fear a
repressive environment. Bolsonaro has
stated that he would rather his son die
in an accident than be gay and would
punch two men if he saw them kissing in
the street. It’s a position he defends in his
interview with TIME. “I do not kiss my
wife on the street. Why face society? Why
take that into the school? Little children
of 6 or 7 watching two men kiss as the
government wanted them to do. Is this
democracy?”
Visibly struggling to contain his tem-
per he asserts angrily that most gays will
vote for him and then pivots to pedo-
philia. “So let’s respect the pedophile’s
right to have sex with a 2-year-old? Would
that unite [Brazil]?” But he adds “if any-
one interferes into the private life of two

people I will defend the right of those
two people between their four walls. That
is no problem.” So he would be the Presi-
dent for all Brazilians? “Yes.”
Gomes the left-wing candidate cur-
rently in fourth place in the polls says
Bolsonaro’s candidacy is drawing intol-
erance and bigotry out into the open—
much as the Nazi Party in Germany did
in the 1930s. Brazil must beware the “egg
of the serpent of Nazism of fascism that
we must treat as a serious threat” he says.
“Of course it is an exaggerated compari-
son but the values of intolerance hate
misogyny discrimination against gays
and women militarism all this is very
powerfully there galvanizing around this
caricature [of Bolsonaro]” he adds.
It’s hard to predict what will happen
on Oct. 7 when Brazilians go to the polls
in a irst round of voting. Although the
U.N. Human Rights Committee has
asked for Lula to be allowed to run most
expect he will be banned. His center-
left supporters may lock to his running
mate Fernando Haddad or Gomes or
environmental candidate Marina Silva
currently in third place. But one poll
suggests that half of all Brazilians are
undecided. Bolsonaro currently polling
at 21% has a shot of reaching at least the
Oct. 28 runof vote. The presidency is
within striking range.
As President Bolsonaro would strug-
gle to ind support in Brasília. His party
has only 9 of 513 seats in the lower house
of parliament and none in the upper
house. In 27 years in Congress he has au-
thored few successful bills and has barely
any allies. The pressure to form alliances
might draw him closer to the center.
But the available evidence suggests
that Bolsonaro is resistant to change. His
opinions and his outrage tactics have
sustained him for over three decades and
are now carrying him toward the highest
oice in the land. He wears them like a
badge of honor. Along with the portraits
of the former generals his congressional
quarters are decorated with military
memorabilia. “I am a captain of the army”
he told journalists in 2017. “My specialty
is to kill.”
Did he mean that literally? No he says
he did not see combat. “If I had partici-
pated I would have killed someone” he
adds. “I would like to have had that expe-
rience of combat. I would have liked to.” □

A supporter celebrates Bolsonaro’s
endorsement at the Social Liberal Party’s
convention on July 22


World


ERBS JR.—AGIF/AP
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