3 de outubro de 2022

Lula ainda deve vencer a corrida presidencial do Brasil. Mas Bolsonaro é assustadoramente forte.

Lula venceu o primeiro turno da eleição presidencial do Brasil ontem e deve vencer Jair Bolsonaro no segundo turno no final deste mês. Mas Bolsonaro e seus aliados superaram as expectativas - e a extrema direita do Brasil continua sendo uma ameaça potente à democracia.

Olavo Passos de Souza


O ex-presidente do Brasil e candidato do PT Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva fala durante entrevista coletiva ao final do primeiro turno das eleições nacionais, em 2 de outubro de 2022. (Alexandre Schneider / Getty Images)

Ontem, 2 de outubro, os brasileiros foram às urnas para decidir seu próximo presidente, 27 governadores, um terço do Senado, 513 parlamentares e milhares de autoridades federaiss e estaduais.

Durante a campanha, o ex-presidente de esquerda Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva liderou todas as pesquisas contra o atual presidente de extrema-direita, o presidente Jair Bolsonaro. Embora a vitória de Lula no primeiro turno nunca tenha sido garantida, os analistas estavam confiantes de que Lula teria uma ampla margem sobre seu adversário, com outros cargos importantes, como os governos de São Paulo e Minas Gerais, também em jogo para serem retomados pela esquerda.

No entanto, Bolsonaro superou suas próprias pontuações nas pesquisas e garantiu um segundo turno, avançando mais do que o esperado em estados-chave como São Paulo, Minas Gerais e Rio. No final do dia, Lula tinha 48,4% dos votos contra 43,2% de Bolsonaro.

Com candidatos bolsonaristas garantindo um grande número de assentos no Senado e no Congresso, bem como governos, o conservadorismo reacionário da direita brasileira não mostra sinais de perder força. Como isso aconteceu?

Uma disputa polarizada

A eleição histórica viu níveis sem precedentes de polarização entre apoiadores de Lula e Bolsonaro. Outros candidatos que talvez pudessem ter sido fortes candidatos em outro ano eleitoral, como Ciro Gomes e Simone Tebet, não conseguiram sequer atingir a marca de 5%, já que a coalizão de Lula e a retórica de Bolsonaro deixaram pouco espaço para qualquer tipo de alternativa de terceira via. Ambos os principais candidatos tinham estratégias de campanha claras e distintas, com um defendendo os valores democráticos e o pragmatismo político, enquanto o outro derivava cada vez mais para o culto ao herói e um discurso autoritário.

A posição de Lula se mantém consistente desde o início do ciclo eleitoral, pregando acima de tudo a rejeição de Bolsonaro e a defesa da democracia. O sindicalista que virou político percorreu um longo caminho desde sua primeira campanha presidencial em 1988. Embora originalmente se posicionasse solidamente à esquerda, a vitória presidencial de Lula em 2002 o aproximou da centro-esquerda, governando com uma política de investimento mútuo e apoio entre os setores público e financeiro.

Amplamente admirado ao final de seu segundo mandato em 2011 com um índice de aprovação de 87%, Lula deixou o cargo como o presidente mais popular da história brasileira, apenas para ver sua sucessora, Dilma Rousseff, ser vítima de um processo de impeachment em 2016 que muitos descreveram como um golpe parlamentar. Seu Partido dos Trabalhadores (PT) foi cada vez mais demonizado por uma direita ressurgente, e o próprio Lula acabou sendo preso sob acusação de corrupção, o que o impediu de concorrer à corrida presidencial de 2018.

Após a anulação de sua condenação pelo Supremo Tribunal Federal e eventual libertação em 2019, Lula foi mais uma vez amplamente considerado o favorito para as eleições de 2022. O ex-presidente poderia ter optado por fazer uma campanha baseada em vingar sua prisão e condenar a direita brasileira e seus ex-opositores que apoiaram tanto o impeachment de Dilma Rousseff quanto a “Operação Lava Jato”, a investigação politicamente tendenciosa que colocou Lula na prisão.

Em vez disso, Lula seguiu uma política de conciliação contra a maior ameaça percebida do governo de extrema-direita de Bolsonaro. Sempre pragmático, Lula estabeleceu uma coalizão para sua campanha que muitos considerariam um sonho apenas alguns anos antes. Como companheiro de chapa, Lula escolheu seu histórico rival Geraldo Alckmin, ex-adversário nas eleições presidenciais de 2006 que também concorreu em 2018.

Alckmin era uma figura central no ironicamente nomeado Partido Social Democrata do Brasil (PSDB) neoliberal, e havia sido um crítico ardente de Lula, chamando o presidente de corrupto e apoiando sua prisão. Agora, ele retratou suas declarações anteriores e se tornou um pilar da campanha de Lula, com os ex-rivais dividindo espaço quase igual na campanha eleitoral. Ao longo do ciclo eleitoral, Lula conquistou o apoio de figuras à sua esquerda e à sua direita, colocando a defesa da democracia acima das diferenças ideológicas.

Essa coalizão impressionante não veio sem um custo. Lula manteve uma única promessa política ao longo da campanha: remover Bolsonaro e desfazer os danos infligidos pelo demagogo de extrema-direita. Essa preocupação imediata ofuscou a discussão usual sobre políticas e promessas de promover o progresso social.

Sua retórica de campanha se concentrou nos sucessos de sua presidência anterior, em vez de promessas para uma futura. Com uma coalizão tão ampla o apoiando, o Lula de hoje não é o sindicalista dos anos 1980 ou o presidente de centro-esquerda dos anos 2000, mas sim uma figura cada vez mais empurrada para o centro.

Clinging on

Bolsonaro’s campaign struck a very different tone from Lula’s. Deserted by much of the political, corporate, and military support that helped elect him in 2018, Bolsonaro closed ranks, intensified his attacks on the Left and on the democratic process itself, and attempted to portray the current chaotic state of the country as idyllic.

From the beginning of the campaign, the incumbent president voiced doubts about the electoral process, criticized the Brazilian voting machines, and claimed that the only way he could be defeated was through voter fraud. Much like Donald Trump, Bolsonaro has sought to make up for his disadvantage at the polls by undermining the election itself. Unlike his US counterpart, however, he has a close relationship with the military, and Brazil’s own troubled history with the political interventions of its armed forces stoked up anxiety.

These attacks on the Brazilian democratic process caused many to believe that Bolsonaro might attempt a coup to secure his victory. The president’s continual praise of the former military dictatorship, his overreliance on military figures to fill his cabinet, and his growing lack of options as the polls reliably predicted a Lula victory certainly indicated that he would be open to such a course.

His capacity to do so, however, is a different story. The corporate sector that threw its support behind Bolsonaro in 2018 has in large part (though with notable exceptions) deserted him in favor of Lula’s coalition. While he may be popular with many of the lower-ranking figures in the military, members of its upper echelons have repeatedly criticized Bolsonaro. Combined with the refusal of the Supreme Court to indulge Bolsonaro’s claims of electoral fraud, this made his chances of pulling off a successful coup slim at best.

While Lula built his campaign on the prospect of a return to normalcy, Bolsonaro presented the current national situation as one of progress and growth. According to the president, the country has experienced steady economic growth and a decrease in social unrest. These claims — made amid an inflation crisis, record deforestation of the Amazon, and an increase in violence against minorities and women — were dubious to say the least.

Key to Bolsonaro’s electoral strategy was his growing appeal to the Christian evangelical right. He relied upon evangelical pastors, a powerful force among the Brazilian lower classes, to garner votes, with classic conservative talking points of supporting family values, being tough on crime, and opposing “communism and gender ideology.”

All in all, Bolsonaro counted on conservatism holding strong in Brazilian society and voters’ rejection of Lula, and left-wing politics in general, to ensure himself a place in the second round. The fact that the president is currently being investigated in a number of corruption scandals only gave him more incentive to win the election, as a defeat could mean imprisonment.
Third Way to Nowhere

Though certainly the loudest and most popular candidates, Lula and Bolsonaro were not the only ones competing for the presidency. Among the other candidates, Ciro Gomes and Simone Tebet loomed large, promising an alternative to Brazil’s increased polarization. Instead, they found themselves caught between two stools.

Gomes is an old figure in Brazilian politics who was once a minister in Lula’s cabinet. In 2018, when the popularity of Lula’s PT was at an all-time low, Gomes ran for the presidency, presenting himself as a center-left pragmatist and the only candidate capable of defeating Bolsonaro.

However, his pitch as the “useful vote” against the far right failed to resonate with a majority of Brazilians, and Gomes ended up taking 12 percent in the first round, behind Bolsonaro and the PT candidate Fernando Haddad, Lula’s replacement. Many blamed him for splitting the vote of the Left, criticisms that were compounded by his refusal to endorse Haddad in the second round.

In 2022, Gomes once again launched a bid for the presidency. Now that Lula was seen as the “useful vote” to remove Bolsonaro, he backpedaled on his old line, instead arguing that the electorate should favor third-way idealism over the pragmatic vote. When election day came, his campaign appeared to collapse around him.

Tebet, a relatively unknown figure just a few years previously, gained some notoriety for participating in the congressional investigation of Bolsonaro’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The center-right politician, much like Gomes, built her campaign on being an alternative to polarization. Her capable oratory skills and self-presentation as a defender of democracy and women’s rights helped to propel the senator to the national spotlight, making her an unexpected contender for third place in the presidential first round.

When push came to shove, both candidates failed to entice the population, and the idea of “moderation” fell flat between Lula’s democratic front and Bolsonaro’s far-right appeal. Tebet secured 4.2 percent of the vote, while Gomes could only manage 3 percent.

Tense finale

As election day approached, tensions grew between supporters of Bolsonaro and Lula, and the remaining candidates found themselves increasingly ostracized as possible spoilers for the top two contenders. On September 7, Bolsonaro turned the bicentennial of Brazilian independence into a political spectacle by politicizing the national holiday, converting what in theory should have been a day to bring all Brazilians together into a large-scale campaign rally.

As the president flew back to his native Rio de Janeiro and delivered a speech to thousands of supporters on Copacabana Beach, it became clear to many anti-Bolsonaro voters that he still possessed a significant and passionate voting base. At Bolsonaro’s side on Independence Day was not his running mate Walter Braga Netto, as one might have expected, but the televangelist Silas Malafaia as well as the retail magnate and hard-core Bolsonarist Luciano Hang.

The same day, in the state of Mato Grosso, a man was hacked to death with a machete by a Bolsonaro supporter after proclaiming his intention to vote for Lula. His death was not the last in a month that grew increasingly fraught, particularly as Bolsonaro rose consistently in the polls, shortening the distance between himself and the front-runner.

Lula’s campaign did not sit idle throughout the month either. The former president’s strategy placed an emphasis on strengthening his coalition by appealing to old allies and even rivals who were not in league with Bolsonaro.

Gomes’s campaign felt the rug pulled from under its feet as old stalwarts from his Democratic Labor Party and even his own brothers voiced their support for Lula. On September 19, Lula held a meeting with eight former presidential candidates, including figures that ranged across the ideological spectrum from the left-wing Socialism and Liberty Party to the conservative Democratic Movement (MDB), all of whom voiced their support for the former president.

Above all else, the coalition sought to ensure a first-round victory for Lula. That outcome would have significantly hampered Bolsonaro’s ability to undermine the election, as many of the state and local-level candidates that backed the president would be unwilling to cast the election results in doubt, lest they also damage the legitimacy of their own victories.

In the final presidential debate, held on September 29 by TV Globo, historically a very influential last stop on the campaign trail, Lula and Bolsonaro reprised their usual talking points of a return to normalcy versus supposed continual growth. The tone of the debate grew sharply hostile as Bolsonaro called Lula a convict and was in turn branded as a liar.

The greatest victor of the debate was arguably Tebet, who once again argued against polarization, while Ciro Gomes repeatedly stumbled and alienated some of his remaining base by appearing close to Bolsonaro. Fears that Tebet or Gomes might prevent Lula from achieving a first-round victory also rose in the last few days of the election cycle.

Right-wing successes

There were over 123 million votes cast on October 2, with about 5 million of these being either blank or spoiled. Bolsonaro’s warnings of mass irregularities and electoral chaos proved groundless. Apart from occasional isolated incidents, such as a man gluing the keys of one voting machine to prevent votes from being cast, the process proved uneventful, although observers noted longer lines than usual in metropolitan centers.

In fact, Bolsonaro had little reason to worry about irregularities, imaginary or not, as his performance far exceeded that predicted in the polls. Lula’s hoped-for first-round victory failed to materialize, and the incumbent president outperformed expectations in nearly every single state. While Lula still surpassed his rival, securing a healthy 4 percent lead with a total of 57.2 million votes against Bolsonaro’s 51 million, the performance of the incumbent came as a surprise to many.

Below the presidential level, the day was a victory for the far right. Out of Brazil’s twenty-six states plus the Federal District, Bolsonarist candidates from the right-wing parties — Liberals, Progressives, and Republicans — secured four governorships in the first round, with a big lead going into the second-round race in four others, including the populous São Paulo.

Where pro-Bolsonaro parties did not win, they usually placed second after big-tent parties of a conservative bent, such as Tebet’s MDB, the Brazil Union, or the Social Democrats. These parties secured five outright victories in the first round, including the Federal District, and are the front-runners for the second round in three others. In Minas Gerais, the incumbent, Romeu Zema — the only elected governor from the libertarian New Party — secured his reelection by a landslide.

From the remaining ten states, Lula’s PT achieved victory only in Brazil’s northeast, where it has traditionally been strong. In that region, PT candidates won three governorships outright and are the front-runners for two others, including Bahia. This leaves five states: the centrist party Solidarity took one and is the front-runner in another, while the left-leaning Socialist Party leads the other three going into the second round.

This leaves the PT with as few as three or, at best, six governors, and very few possible allies. In the Senate, Bolsonarist parties elected fourteen senators out of twenty-seven, with the big-tent conservative parties gaining an additional seven seats. As for federal, state, and local congresspeople, the results are still being tallied but do not appear favorable to the Left.

Bolsonaro's Last Stand

Avictory for Lula in the first round was always a hope, never a guaranteed outcome. His margin of victory over Bolsonaro remains sizable, and with Gomes and Tebet out of the second round, the electoral mathematics are on his side.

However, much can happen between now and October 30, when Brazil will decide its next president once and for all. With the Right strengthened in such a manner, Bolsonaro can count on considerable support for his efforts to attack Lula’s campaign. Disinformation and threats have always been routine tools of Bolsonarism, and now that the gap is not unsurmountable, the incumbent will likely make use of all his tricks.

If Lula still triumphs, there will be the issue of legitimacy. Bolsonaro will find himself in the perfect position to contest the election result should he lose by a small margin in the second round, something which is entirely possible after Sunday’s upset. The president might not have the support of key elements necessary for a full coup, but his fervent base, certain of its leader’s victory, could prove a dangerous force. With the specter of the 2021 Capitol Hill riot still looming over many Western democracies, the possibility of Bolsonaro trying something similar seems less of an if than a when.

Finally, assuming that Lula does secure his victory and is able to take office without impediment, it is evident that the president will face the most hostile Congress in the history of his career. Lula, a left-wing politician who can no longer be elected solely through the support of the Left, might find himself incapable of governing even from the center, stranded in a conservative democracy that is growing more conservative by the day and less democratic by the minute. Even if Lula wins comfortably on October 30, there is an urgent need for the kind of social mobilization that can open up the democratic space in Brazil once again.

Colaborador

Olavo Passos de Souza é doutorando em história pela Stanford University.

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