Lula Becomes Brazil’s President, With Bolsonaro
in Florida
Brazil inaugurates its new president, Luiz Inácio Lula
da Silva, on Sunday. Facing investigations, former President Jair Bolsonaro has
taken refuge in Orlando.
By Jack
Nicas and André Spigariol
Jack Nicas
and André Spigariol reported this article from Brazil’s capital, Brasília.
Jan. 1,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/01/world/americas/bolsonaro-florida-brazil.html
President
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva took the reins of the Brazilian government on Sunday
in an elaborate inauguration, complete with a motorcade, music festival and
hundreds of thousands of supporters filling the central esplanade of Brasília,
the nation’s capital.
But one key
person was missing: the departing far-right president, Jair Bolsonaro.
Mr.
Bolsonaro was supposed to pass Mr. Lula the presidential sash on Sunday, an
important symbol of the peaceful transition of power in a nation where many
people still recall the 21-year military dictatorship that ended in 1985.
Instead,
Mr. Bolsonaro woke up Sunday thousands of miles away, in a rented house owned
by a professional mixed-martial-arts fighter a few miles from Disney World.
Facing various investigations from his time in his office, Mr. Bolsonaro flew
to Orlando on Friday night and plans to stay in Florida for at least a month.
Mr.
Bolsonaro had questioned the reliability of Brazil’s election systems for
months, without evidence, and when he lost in October, he refused to concede
unequivocally. In a sort of farewell address on Friday, breaking weeks of near
silence, he said that he tried to block Mr. Lula from taking office but failed.
“Within the
laws, respecting the Constitution, I searched for a way out of this,” he said.
He then appeared to encourage his supporters to move on. “We live in a
democracy or we don’t,” he said. “No one wants an adventure.”
A crowd of
well-wishers greeted the motorcade of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of
Brazil and his wife, Rosangela da Silva, after his swearing-in in Brasília on
Sunday.Credit...Dado Galdieri for The New York Times
On Sunday,
Mr. Lula ascended the ramp to the presidential offices with a diverse group of
Brazilians, including a Black woman, a disabled man, a 10-year-old boy, an
Indigenous man and a factory worker. A voice then announced that Mr. Lula would
accept the green-and-yellow sash from “the Brazilian people,” and Aline Sousa,
a 33-year-old garbage collector, played the role of Mr. Bolsonaro and placed
the sash on the new president.
In an
address to Congress on Sunday, Mr. Lula said that he would fight hunger and
deforestation, lift the economy and try to unite the country. But he also took
aim at his predecessor, saying that Mr. Bolsonaro had threatened Brazil’s
democracy.
“Under the
winds of redemocratization, we used to say, ‘Dictatorship never again,’” he
said. “Today, after the terrible challenge we’ve overcome, we must say,
‘Democracy forever.’”
Mr. Lula’s
ascension to the presidency caps a stunning political comeback. He was once
Brazil’s most popular president, leaving office with an approval rating above
80 percent. He then served 580 days in prison, from 2018 to 2019, on corruption
charges that he accepted a condo and renovations from construction companies
bidding on government contracts.
After those
convictions were thrown out because Brazil’s Supreme Court ruled that the judge
in Mr. Lula’s case was biased, he ran for the presidency again — and won.
Mr. Lula,
77, and his supporters maintain that he was the victim of political
persecution. Mr. Bolsonaro and his supporters say that Brazil now has a
criminal as president.
In
Brasília, hundreds of thousands of people streamed into the sprawling, planned
capital, founded in 1960 to house the Brazilian government, with many dressed
in the bright red of Mr. Lula’s leftist Workers’ Party.
Over the
weekend, passengers on arriving planes broke into rally songs about Mr. Lula,
revelers danced to samba at New Year’s Eve parties and, across the city,
spontaneous cries rang out from balconies and street corners, heralding Mr.
Lula’s arrival and Mr. Bolsonaro’s exit.
“Lula’s
inauguration is mainly about hope,” said Isabela Nascimento, 30, a software
developer walking to the festivities on Sunday. “I hope to see him representing
not only a political party, but an entire population — a whole group of people
who just want to be happier.”
Yet
elsewhere in the city, thousands of Mr. Bolsonaro’s supporters remained camped
outside the army headquarters, as they have been since the election, many
saying they were convinced that at the final moment on Sunday, the military
would prevent Mr. Lula from taking office.
“The army
has patriotism and love for the country, and in the past, the army did the same
thing,” Magno Rodrigues, 60, a former mechanic and janitor who gives daily
speeches at the protests, said on Saturday, referring to the 1964 military coup
that ushered in the dictatorship.
Mr.
Rodrigues has spent the past nine weeks sleeping in a tent on a narrow pad with
his wife. He provided a tour of the encampment, which had become a small
village since Mr. Bolsonaro lost the election. It has showers, a laundry
service, cellphone-charging stations, a hospital and 28 food stalls.
The
protests have been overwhelmingly nonviolent — with more praying than rioting —
but a small group of people have set fire to vehicles. Mr. Lula’s transitional
government had suggested that the encampments would not be tolerated for much
longer.
How long
was Mr. Rodrigues prepared to stay? “As long as it takes to liberate my
country,” he said. “For the rest of my life if I have to.”
The absence
of Mr. Bolsonaro and the presence of thousands of protesters who believe the
election was stolen illustrate the deep divide and tall challenges that Mr.
Lula faces in his third term as president of Latin America’s biggest country
and one of the world’s largest democracies.
He oversaw
a boom in Brazil from 2003 to 2011, but the country was not nearly as polarized
then, and the economic tailwinds were far stronger. Mr. Lula’s election caps a
leftist wave in Latin America, with six of the region’s seven largest countries
electing leftist leaders since 2018, fueled by an anti-incumbent backlash.
Mr.
Bolsonaro’s decision to spend at least the first weeks of Mr. Lula’s presidency
in Florida shows his unease about his future in Brazil. Mr. Bolsonaro, 67, is
linked to five separate inquiries, including one into his release of documents
related to a classified investigation, another on his attacks on Brazil’s
voting machines and another into his potential connections to “digital
militias” that spread misinformation on his behalf.
As a
regular citizen, Mr. Bolsonaro will now lose the prosecutorial immunity he had
as president. Some cases against him will probably be moved to local courts
from the Supreme Court.
Some top
federal prosecutors who have worked on the cases believe there is enough
evidence to convict Mr. Bolsonaro, particularly in the case related to the
release of classified material, according to a top federal prosecutor who spoke
on the condition of anonymity to discuss confidential investigations.
On Sunday,
Mr. Lula told Congress that Mr. Bolsonaro could face consequences. “We have no
intention of revenge against those who tried to subjugate the nation to their
personal and ideological plans, but we will guarantee the rule of law,” he
said. “Those who have done wrong will answer for their mistakes.”
It is
unlikely that Mr. Bolsonaro’s presence in the United States could protect him
from prosecution in Brazil. Still, Florida has become a sort of refuge for
conservative Brazilians in recent years.
Prominent
pundits on some of Brazil’s most popular talk shows are based in Florida. A
far-right provocateur who faces arrest in Brazil for threatening judges has
lived in Florida as he awaits a response to his political asylum request in the
United States. And Carla Zambelli, one of Mr. Bolsonaro’s top allies in
Brazil’s Congress, fled to Florida for nearly three weeks after she was filmed
pursuing a man at gunpoint on the eve of the election.
Mr.
Bolsonaro plans to stay in Florida for one to three months, giving him some
distance to observe whether Mr. Lula’s administration will push any of the
investigations against him, according to a close friend of the Bolsonaro family
who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private plans. The Brazilian
government has also authorized four aides to spend a month in Florida with Mr.
Bolsonaro, according to an official notice.
On
Saturday, Mr. Bolsonaro greeted his new neighbors in the driveway of his rented
Orlando house, many of them Brazilian immigrants who took selfies with the
departing president. He then went to a KFC to eat.
It is not
uncommon for former heads of state to live in the United States for posts in
academia or similar ventures. But it is unusual for a head of state to seek
safe haven in the United States from possible prosecution at home, particularly
when the home country is a democratic U.S. ally.
Mr.
Bolsonaro and his allies argue that he is a political target of Brazil’s left
and particularly Brazil’s Supreme Court. They have largely dropped claims that
the election was rigged because of voter fraud but instead now claim that it
was unfair because Alexandre de Moraes, a Supreme Court justice who runs
Brazil’s election agency, tipped the scales for Mr. Lula.
Mr. Moraes
was an active player in the election, suspending the social-media accounts of
many of Mr. Bolsonaro’s supporters and granting Mr. Lula more television time
because of misleading statements in Mr. Bolsonaro’s political ads. Mr. Moraes
has said he needed to act to counter the antidemocratic stances of Mr.
Bolsonaro and his supporters. Some legal experts worry that he abused his
power, often acting unilaterally in ways that go far beyond that of a typical
Supreme Court judge.
Still, Mr.
Bolsonaro has faced widespread criticism, on both the right and the left, for
his response to his election loss. After suggesting for months he would dispute
any loss — firing up his supporters and worrying his critics — he instead went
silent, refusing to acknowledge Mr. Lula’s victory publicly. His administration
carried out the transition as he receded from the spotlight and many of his
official duties.
On Saturday
night, in his departing speech to the nation, even his vice president, Hamilton
Mourão, a former general, made clear his views on Mr. Bolsonaro’s final moments
as president.
“Leaders
that should reassure and unite the nation around a project for the country have
let their silence or inopportune and harmful protagonism create a climate of
chaos and social disintegration,” Mr. Mourão said.
A
correction was made on Jan. 1, 2023: An earlier version of this article
referred incorrectly to the distance between Brazil’s capital, Brasília, and
Orlando, Fla. It is roughly 6,000 kilometers, not 6,000 miles.
When we
learn of a mistake, we acknowledge it with a correction. If you spot an error,
please let us know at nytnews@nytimes.com.Learn more
Jack Nicas
is the Brazil bureau chief, covering Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Paraguay and
Uruguay. He previously reported on technology from San Francisco and, before
joining The Times in 2018, spent seven years at The Wall Street Journal. @jacknicas
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