Return of the ‘Pink Tide’ in Brazil

Posted By : Telegraf
10 Min Read

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Brazil’s former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has hit the political turf running. He was catapulted back on to the front line of Brazilian politics on Monday by the surprise decision of the country’s Supreme Court to declare that the anti-corruption operation that scuppered Lula’s bid to reclaim the presidency in the 2018 election was “the greatest judicial scandal” in the country’s history.

By Wednesday, Lula had delivered a stirring and potentially historic address widely seen as the start of a bid to wrest the presidency back. Lula excoriated the far-right incumbent President Jair Bolsonaro’s “moronic” and bungling response to the Covid-19 pandemic. Brazilian politics is in turmoil after Bolsonaro’s ineptitude and denialism of the scale of the Covid crisis.

A poll result last weekend showed that 50% of Brazilians might or would definitely vote for Lula at the next election compared with just 38% for Bolsonaro. To be sure, Lula’s rehabilitation electrifies the run-up to the 2022 election, and a titanic clash between the so-called “Pink Tide” and toxic right-wing populism is in the cards.

(The manifestations of a broader Latin American shift to the left has been labeled the “Pink Tide” to contrast the more moderate policies of some regional governments with Latin America’s historically hardline or “red” leftist movements.)

Clearly, Lula remains a much-loved figure revered for his crusade against poverty. The halcyon days of economic boom that Brazil witnessed during his eight-year stewardship as president is viewed with nostalgia. Lula turned away from the extremes and toward more pragmatic approaches to the persistent challenges of poverty, inequality and economic development in his country.



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