Bolsonaro has lost in every election held in Latin America in recent years.
The wave of conservatives that had brought him to power swept through the air, giving way to a sustained shift to the left that even reached Colombia, which this Sunday elected Gustavo Petro the first left-wing president in its history.
The Brazilian president gave a receipt in the only showdown he’s ever made about the Colombian election.
As Mônica Bergamo reported this Monday, Bolsonaro sent his BBC News Brasil report to a restricted group with the headline, “The former guerrilla won the election in Colombia and will be the first left-wing president in the country.”
He wrote below the photo: “Cuba…Venezuela…Argentina…Chile…Brazil???”
Yes, according to all the polls on the 2022 presidential election, Brazil should be next.
And Bolsonaro forgot to add to the list of Mexico, Bolivia, Peru, Honduras, which are still ruled by left-wing parties.
That is, the captain was increasingly isolated in Latin America, now without the protection of his idol Donald Trump, who risks being sued in the United States for conspiring against the election of Joe Biden and promoting the invasion of the Capitol. . . .
If Bolsonaro is considering doing the same in Brazil if he loses the election, it’s worth being careful as he’s already threatened. The tide is not in your favor, the wind has turned.
Surrounded by everything from the Amazon to Petrobras, whose popularity has been eroded by inflation, hunger and unemployment, Bolsonaro enters the decisive phase of the election campaign, in an economic scenario that has never been more unfavorable for him. government. to suggest.
He has just 100 days left to try to prevent former President Lula from deciding the election in the first round.
After the tragic events in the Amazon, there is no marketer in the world who can improve his image and make him a competitive candidate as the result of a suicidal and murderous government policy that has brought the forest to the wrath of predators. causing the death of the indigenous and natives who defended it and threatening the ecological balance of the planet.
At this point the question arises: If the captain has not yet submitted a single national project to get the country out of the pit, why and for what does he want re-election so badly?
Isn’t the destruction it has encouraged in all aspects of national life during this three-and-a-half-year government period, which has turned the country into a Hunger Map and turned it into a pariah in the international community, is not enough?
It may be that the object of numerous lawsuits in the courts, however, is the defense of one’s own skin, that of family members and communities.
He’s even willing to smash Petrobras and draw in the spirit basin to escape, as if it was possible to lower the price of fuel in a scream.
From 2018 the world has changed, Latin America is changing, only the captain does not realize that making “guns” with his fingers is waving again with “gay kit”, “red danger” and “combat”. “corruption” scares anyone anymore with Centrão in tow. Your word and flags are old and old. Antipetismo has given way to antibolsonarismo.
Times are different now, as the victories of Gabriel Boric in Chile and Gustavo Petro in Colombia showed, the two leaders of the new Latin America were more concerned with social justice and the defense of the environment, hunger and the fight against hunger. Poverty is a priority in Brazil, as it was under Lula’s government.
“Today is a day of celebration for people. May so much pain be relieved with the joy that fills the heart of the country today. How many people who could not accompany us today, how many lost on the roads of Colombia”, These were the first words of Petro when the result was announced. Francia Márquez, the first black female vice president to be elected as a domestic worker and environmental leader, thanked “our ancestors and all Colombians who gave their lives for this moment”.
The world is turning, thankfully. There’s nothing like a succession of days with a night in between.
Life goes on.
source: Noticias
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