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Are Brazilians Ready for Democracy? They'll Answer on the Ballot Box PDF Print E-mail
Written by Arthur Ituassu   
Tuesday, 15 August 2006 19:47

Brazil's opposition candidate to the presidency Geraldo AlckminThe first big soccer event in Brazil after the disappointing performance of the national team in the world cup in Germany was the two-leg final (July 17 and 26) of the Brazilian Cup, an important competition at national level, played between two Rio de Janeiro giants - Flamengo and Vasco - at the Maracanã stadium. It was a sobering and revealing return to the country's reality.

In terms of history and respect, the Maracanã is the stadium in Brazil. It was built for Brazil's hosting of the 1950 world cup and is routinely described as the greatest arena in the world (admittedly in a country where that superlative is a popular favorite).

Today, Maracanã is one national monument that is completely disrespected by the authorities. The seats are dangerous, the entrance is dirty, there is no parking lot or even minimum provision for food and drink, and an atmosphere of violence is all around.

This combination from time to time produces violent scenes such as those exposed by the Brazilian press after the second cup-final match - including photographs of policemen brutally beating fans at the stadium entrance with their truncheons. The captions read: "the guards try to organize the line".

A police colonel, Álvaro Garcia, openly approved the action and told Rio's daily O Globo: "The misbehavior of the fans is absurd and difficult to control. A lot of people come without a ticket, wanting to steal other people's, and create confusion. There is no way to know who is who. The just pays for sinner."

On the night of the matches, the just also paid for sinner in the streets of Leblon in Rio, as one of the most expensive neighborhoods in the city became a stage for vandalism, chaotic noise, and fighting. In the squares of São Paulo too, buses were burned and people were attacked in their homes as the insurgency of the Primeiro Comando da Capital (PCC) gang continues barely abated.

The events at and around the Maracanã highlight the three major issues facing Brazil as the elections scheduled for October 1st and 29 approach (the latter date will see a second-round run-off for the presidential and gubernatorial races if required). A campaign that gains momentum with the launch of radio and TV broadcasts on 15 August must, if it is to facilitate a meaningful dialogue about the country's problems, focus attention on the level of violence, on education, and on the corruption and behavior of public institutions.

The scale of the election is enormous: almost 126 million Brazilian voters will choose their president, vice-president, 27 state governors and members of assemblies, 513 federal deputies, and 27 members (a third of the total) of the senate. This time, Brazilians will be making a judgment on the way that their politics has been dominated by scandal, lawlessness and disintegration for the previous eighteen months. It is no exaggeration to say that the democratic destiny of the nation is at stake.

The clear favorite for the top job is the incumbent, President Lula, who until now has been successful in distancing himself from the wave of scandal that dominated 2005 and caused the resignation of his leading allies. Two rival candidates are, however, fighting hard to reach the second round: Geraldo Alckmin of the PSDB and Heloísa Helena of the PSOL (a leftist breakaway from Lula's own Workers' Party [PT]).

As the "electronic campaign" gets underway - with election broadcasts by the leading candidates being featured on national TV and radio several times a week - it is becoming clear that the coming months in Brazil will be a test not just of Brazilians' political preferences, but of their belief in politics itself as a possible vehicle of social change. As the title of a recent book I have co-edited asks: O Brasil tem jeito? ("Is there a way for Brazil?").

The Power of the Middle

The three issues named above (violence, education and corruption) will not be the sole matters of concern in the campaign; others such as economic growth, exports, transport, infrastructure, and taxes will also be prominent.

There is a widespread feeling in Brazil that taxes are too high - almost 40% of national income - and without much to see in return. And even if the size of the state may not be thought important, the quality of public spending must be. The people of Brazil are sorely lacking in public benefits.

True, 95% of Brazilian children are at school (80% of them in public ones), but they are not learning; UNESCO figures show that the country's expenditure on a primary-school child is 56th in the world (behind Colombia, Uruguay and Namibia).

Brazil has as many illiterate people in its population as those of Portugal and Uruguay combined. The failures in education are paralleled in healthcare and justice; they create an environment that denies both security and equal opportunity to citizens.

But important as they are, it is the "big three" issues that may become a formative influence in the weeks ahead, and for a vital reason: the decisive importance in the next election of the Brazilian middle class. In July, two of Lula's actions showed the electoral power of this group.

First, he decided to veto a law proposing a safety-fund for domestic maids (something that every regular employee in other industries in Brazil has access to), even though it would have cost their middle-class employers only a small amount more. Second, the PT announced that it will included middle-class people in its Fome Zero (zero hunger) program if Lula wins a second term.

Lula, the working-class president, has always had trouble appealing to Brazil's middle class, and that is where Geraldo Alckmin seeks his opportunity.

The Institutional Matrix

A recent opinion poll found that 47.9% planned to vote for Lula, against 19.7% for Alckmin and 9.3% for Heloísa Helena. A combined vote of over 57% for the two "left" candidates, even after all the corruption scandals, is significant. Yet the figures show also that Alckmin has possibilities to appeal to the undecided and the current abstainers; a second-round contest cannot be ruled out.

In any case, the gubernatorial elections will also be vital in establishing the PSDB's power-base. The party will likely keep its hold of São Paulo state (headed by José Serra) and Minas Gerais (Aécio Neves), while Lula's PT may not succeed in Rio - which would exclude the ruling party from the country's three main states.

The PSDB's current fortunes suggest that what used to be called the politics of café com leite (coffee-and-milk) - a trade-off between power at presidential and regional level - may be a viable future strategy for the party of former president, Fernando Henrique Cardoso.

Meanwhile, a renovation of the congress will be a good result. After the innumerable corruption scandals, it is so weakened as the end of Lula's first term nears that the president has suggested an extraordinary constitutional assembly to propose reform. Several websites list the names and pictures of congressmen currently involved in the various scandals.

The number of new members of congress after the October elections will be one measure of political progress; and as Lula's government was at the center of scandal during these years, a weaker PT may result and pose problems for Lula's second term.

The political and social convulsions of the past 18 months make the upcoming elections the most important political moment in Brazil since its return to democracy. The result will clearly indicate the readiness of Brazilian citizens to embrace change, and to see politics as its viable instrument.

The campaign is an opportunity to raise questions that the candidates must not be allowed to evade. Why do many of Brazil's problems remain unchanged? Why are Brazilian citizens constantly disrespected by the way the authorities spend public money? Why are there no free and efficient schools and hospitals?

Why is there no security or equal access to justice? Why are a very few Brazilians considered "more" Brazilian than the majority of the population? Is politics to be allowed to degenerate to nothing more than a TV show?

And behind these questions lies an even more fundamental one: is there a way for Brazil?

Arthur Ituassu is professor of international relations at the Pontifícia Universidade Católica in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. You can read more from him at his website: www.ituassu.com.br. This article appeared originally in Open Democracy - www.opendemocracy.net.

Comments (5)Add Comment
great article !
written by ch.c., August 16, 2006
Very well explained. Brazilian politicians know how to spend money....by creating more well paid civil servants jobs. They also know how to take their due "dime" through corruption.....despite having higher salaries and perks than their peers in many developed nations......much much wealthier than your own country !
Funny.....isnt it ?
But they dont know and dont care to invest for the benefits of the society....as explained in the article. In fact Lula and his government invests only 0,4 %, education and infrastructure Yyesssss.....what a shame ! If some disagrees....just refer to the numbers provided by Alckmin !

Lula is also proud of his achievements during his mandate......by being responsible for Brazil to have the lowest economic growth of ALL developing nations ! Yeahhhhhh.....proud of his failures !

And sorry but Brazil is not democracy....knowing that everything is bought......including the votes.....!
Brazil wants only to appear as a democracy !
A messy situation....in a s**tty country !
Funny that the Brazilian society will vote to elect or re-elect the people who have stolen their money !!!!!! Not much common sense.
Brazil is not democracy....Is That So?
written by racureiu, August 16, 2006
Let me see.... Is the USA(moeba) a democracy?

Is that why you have the Patriotic Act? It's funny how americans relable things to make them look good!

The ol saying....You may spray a lot of perfume on the pig, but at the end of the day, the Pig still a Pig.

good day....keolie
Re: Brazil is not democracy....Is That So?
written by Truth, August 17, 2006
Mediocre racureiu... didn't you notice that ch.c is swiss?
...
written by cacique, August 24, 2006
"who until now has been successful in distancing himself from the wave of scandal that dominated 2005"

Wishfull thinking. Lula was investigated more than any president before him (partly because he's so hated by the elite) and came out clean. But that doesn't stop the elite from dragging his name in the mud, does it. Too bad. You lose. Lula will win. Viva Lula.
...
written by Carolina, August 25, 2006
Cacique

you sure you know what you're talking about? I mean the elite dragging Lula in the mud? With all the corruption among his government, he slipping from charging someone of his own party guity, he himself did the job afterall!

I voted for Lula in 2003 and PT in every election I participated since I was 18 and didn't like what I saw when he finally, finally was elected. He was a frog for us who believed in PT.

But the truth is that Lula and PT had already shown a bit of their character, but the problem was that many of us wasn't aware of these facts. A great the biggest deception for me this rat Lula!

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