LeroyBrown
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- Sep 23, 2018
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1) It is unlikely that Brazil would turn into a dictatorship from either the left or the right. Unlike Venezuela or even Argentina, Brazil has much stronger and more independent institutions, like the judiciary and the Congress. If it was up to Lula and Dilma, they would have followed the Chavez model of government when they were ruling the country. They did not because the institutions and laws would not let them. Today, the actual power of a Brazilian president is very limited.
Which brings us to Bolsonaro. He might have the votes to be elected, but he lacks legislative support to rule. His party is minuscule and none of the traditional politicians (who have legislative base) wanted to be his vice-president. If elected, he will be a lame duck president (as far as Congress is concerned) from the get go. And he needs Congress to approve budgets and to execute policies in general.
2) Could Bolsonaro pull off a coup? Unlikely. The top military brass DETESTS him. He was a low level officer (Captain) who was booted from the army for insubordination. The current military leadership wants nothing to do with politics and they are very open and public about it. Without the Military and the support of the mainstream politicians, he cannot ever hope to pull off a coup.
3) He is popular because he is an outsider, a fringe politician. After 14 years of PT (left wing) rule, with the biggest corruption scandal in the country's history and with most mainstream politicians somewhat implicated, people wanted something different. They found him.
The thing is- he doesn't need congress, military, etc because he's like an Uribe, Fujimori, Ortega, that guy in Honduras who I can't remember & probably many others. Politically he is an outsider but he has deep connections & respect in the underworld, in places like Brazil this is what matters. Brazilian military is a joke, he doesn't need or want them, but Brazilian paramilitary groups are for real and he represents, possibly even commands, them. He'll have the state turn a blind eye to the milicias (most of those guys are military/police rejects like himself), giving them free reign to impose order & control in the streets, as they're currently trying to. He will replicate in Brazil what is already in place in much of Latin America - parallel power structures in the absence/incompetence of the state.