Brazil shows how capitalism stamps out democracy

January 16, 2019
Issue 

Brazil is going through a profound political crisis, probably more serious than the military coup in 1964 that ushered in 25 years of authoritarian rule, writes Sue Bradford.

After his election as president in October, the neo-fascist Jair Bolsonaro began selecting his ministers. His most important decision ā€” and one that will probably change the destiny of Brazil for many decades ā€” was to choose Paulo Guedes, an advocate of extreme free-market economics, as a super-minister, responsible for a hugely-expanded finance ministry.

As Bryan Pitts, from Indiana University, has pointed out, Guedes is perhaps ā€œthe most grotesque proponent of neoliberal, market-friendly policies the US has ever had in Latin Americaā€.

According to Juliane Fruno, from the University of Campinas, SĆ£o Paolo, ā€œhe is talking of raising a colossal two trillion reais [$750 billion] during his four-year government by selling off absolutely all the state companiesā€. Such a fire sale, largely to foreign corporations, would destroy Brazilā€™s already battered plans for becoming an independent world power.

These policies, along with Bolsonaroā€™s equally alarming plans for slashing social welfare, dismantling environmental safeguards and ripping up gun controls, will be opposed fiercely by many sectors. What is remarkable is that opinion polls have repeatedly shown that Brazilians donā€™t support Bolsonaroā€™s most radical policies. For instance, three-quarters of the population is against the sale of the countryā€™s huge state-controlled oil company, Petrobras, to a foreign company, as Guedes plans.

Rich pickings

There are rich pickings in Brazil for US corporations, which seem anxious to regain some of the space occupied by the Chinese while US attention has been elsewhere. Former US defence secretary James Mattis, the retired marine corps general who earned his ā€œmad dogā€ epithet during the Iraq war, recently said that ā€œcompetition between great powers, not terrorism, is now the main focus of Americaā€™s national securityā€.

And Brazilā€™s huge natural resources ā€” one of the worldā€™s largest hydrocarbon reserves, the planetā€™s greatest biodiversity, its abundant mineral reserves, its arable land ā€” make it a very attractive prize for US corporations anxious to expand their reach.

Until Bolsonaroā€™s victory, there was one problem ā€” even pro-US Michel Temer, the lame-duck president replaced by Bolsonaro, could not open up the country quickly or radically enough to satisfy the demands of neoliberalism. The solution was to facilitate the victory of a candidate who would.

Although some of Bolsonaroā€™s inflammatory attacks on women, gays and indigenous people may be too extreme even for Donald Trumpā€™s administration, he was seen as a candidate who could win and Washington could ensure that he adopted US-friendly economic policies. Indeed, Bolsonaro selected Guedes as his economic guru shortly after a meeting in New York with the corporate think tankĀ Americas Society/Council of the Americas (AS/COA).

So the US started providing funds and know-how to assist Bolsonaro in his electoral campaign. As Marcelo Zero, a sociologist and advisor to the Workersā€™ Party (PT) in the senate, has said: ā€œIt is an old tactic, developed by the US and British intelligence to manipulate public opinion and influence political processes and elections. It was used in the Ukraine, the Arab Spring and Brazil in 2013.ā€

Hard evidence is beginning to emerge, thanks to diligent Brazilian journalists, of the way millions of dollars were brought in, mainly from the US, to fund fake news campaigns. Brazil is turning into a case study of French economist Thomas Pikettyā€™s assertion that capitalist accumulation in the 21st century is not compatible with democracy.

On the rebound

The shock of Bolsonaroā€™s victory is still palpable, but some Brazilians are rebounding. Zero is cautiously optimistic, telling Red Pepper: ā€œThe situation is very difficult, of course, but at least a part of the population will react when Bolsonaro begins to destroy rights.

ā€œFrom now on, he will change from being an indestructible rock to a fragile glass. He will have to respond to the populationā€™s concrete problems and that will be difficult with Guedesā€™s neoliberal agenda.ā€

Other analysts say the anti-Bolsonaro campaign in the run-up to the second round of the election brought together forces that go far beyond the PT and the traditional social movements. Many of those who took part admitted that they were voting for Fernando Haddad, the PT candidate and Bolsonaroā€™s opponent in the second round, through gritted teeth. They couldnā€™t forgive the PT for its betrayals, but they needed to defend democracy.

The mobilisation didnā€™t change the outcome of the election, but it may be enough to form the basis of a broad social resistance. As the journalist Leonardo Sakamoto has pointed out, this may prove a good chance for the democratic camp finally to reinvent itself, go back to its bases and build a new project for the country.

Sakamoto believes that Brazilians must look forward: ā€œWe must build a narrative that wins people over through hope. If not, the vacuum may be filled with fear ā€” and fear is a cold and dark place, where people can easily getĀ trapped.ā€

[Reprinted from .]

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