Without a Plan No President Can Rescue Brazil, Says Landless Leader

João Pedro Stédile is an economist and a national leader of Brazil’s Landless Workers Movement and is known for his acid criticism of the national elite.

Together with other leaders of the social movement, he wrote the Letter to the Brazilian People, in which they demand changes in the economic policy and priorities of the Lula Government.


Here Stédile answers some questions:


How do you see the current political situation in Brazil?


Stédile: It’s very complicated. Brazil is going through a serious crisis. It’s not only because of the accusations of corruption. It’s basically a crisis of destiny. A crisis of the economic model. Our society does not have a development project.


We had an agro-export model imposed by colonizing capital, in the first four centuries of our existence. Beginning with the revolution of the 1930s up to 1980, we had a model of dependent industrialization that industrialized and urbanized the country.


Then came the crisis. The elites tried to get out of the crisis by imposing the neo-liberal model which in truth is not a project of the country, it’s only the subordination of the country to the interests of international capital.


So neo-liberalism neither took the country out of the economic crisis nor represents a national project. Lula, motivated by aspirations of getting into office, accepted making an alliance with this neo-liberal elite, without discussing a project with the people. And the result is obvious: we remain in crisis.


Do you believe that the Lula government can retake the programmatic line that was promised in the electoral campaign of 2002?


Of course. But everything depends on the correlation of forces. It does not depend any more on declarations of good will, either by the president or by sectors of the government or by the Workers Party.


It depends on the possibility of carrying out mass mobilizations demanding changes in the economic policy and a broad political reform that rescues the Lula government from being held hostage to its conservative alliances and its commitments to the neo-liberals.


Is Lula being destabilized by the right?


The government is in crisis but it has not yet been destabilized. The right plays with various alternatives, the first being to keep the government hostage to neo-liberal agreements. And in the worst case, overthrow it, or defeat it politically so that with political demoralization the right can return to win the 2006 elections.


And 2006, the presidential succession?


If it is true that our crisis is about the lack of a project, of a model, of a destiny, presidential elections will not resolve it. We can reelect Lula, Cardoso can return, we can elect Heloí­sa Helena , whoever we want depending on our party allegiances.


We will only get out of the crisis if we have a national development project that places a high priority on finding a solution for the main problems of the people. The problems of the people include the right to work, income, land, housing, schooling, and culture.


For this reason, we need to confront the foreign debt, the bankers, the huge multinationals, and the latifundium. To make this project viable, we need to bring together the social forces that can discuss it with the people and defend it.


We in the MST are worried about the future of Brazil, not about who is going to be the next president of the Republic.


Do you believe that the country really can do it? Has the “jeito”, or skill, to do it?


Of course the country has the “jeito”. The ones without any “jeito” in this country are the elites, the ruling class, the owners of capital, the owners of the latifundiums, those who are sending our wealth overseas.


Just look, there are 10,000 Brazilians who declare on their income tax that they have money deposited abroad, a total US$ 82 billion. They really don’t have “jeito”. Those jet setters who keep alive the luxury stores in our business centers, they don’t have “jeito”.


But the Brazilian people are hard workers, generous, wise and know how to struggle. Everything is in place to work out okay, if only we can free ourselves from the influence of those above us.


This interview was published in the August issue of the Newspaper of the Federal Justice Employees Union – RS SINTRAJUFE

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil and Argentina Protectionism to Jump with Venezuela in Mercosur

Venezuela has become the fifth member of Mercosur, an addition that could accelerate the ...

The best of stage and screen

CDs or Books by Keyword, Title or Author By Alessandra Dalevi In a daring ...

World’s 5th: Brazil’s Pre-Salt Oil Might Top 100 Billion Barrels

Pre-salt oil reserves from Brazil, which are already under concession, could reach as much ...

Brazil Exports Shatter All Official Targets

During the first two months of this year, Brazil’s exports amounted to US$ 15 ...

Lula Announces Brazil Will Spend US$ 10 Bi on Social Programs in 2006

In a message directed to the Brazilian Congress on Tuesday’s (February 15) inauguration of ...

Brazil's Kayapo Indian chiefs

Uncontacted Indians Believed Dead Emerge from Brazilian Amazon

In an extraordinary encounter, a group of 89 uncontacted Indians suddenly appeared in an ...

Brazil: Rush in Congress for Biosecurity Law

The Brazilian government once again placed the issue of Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) in ...

Fire and Poetry

Who is the Brazilian teenager? He/she is passionate and apathetic, abstemious and drug-addicted, criminal ...

Arabs Are Ready to Deal, But Brazilians Have to Put Some Effort

Brazil's foreign minister, Celso Amorim, is back in Brazil after a five-day tour of ...

Soccer: Brazil to Host 2014 World Cup

The president of the Chilean Football Association Reinaldo Sánchez almost but confirmed Brazil as ...