En kvinna protesterar mot Jair Bolsonaro. (LUISA GONZALEZ / TT NYHETSBYRÅN)

”Läget i Brasilien visar på demokratins bräcklighet”

Utvecklingen i Brasilien påminner oss om ”demokratins bräcklighet” och” de strategiska hindren för vänstern att vinna mark över kapitalstarka och mäktiga särintressen”, skriver Dagens Arenas ledarskribent Daniel Mathisen.

Inför helgens val ökar presidentkandidaten Jair Bolsonaro i opinionsmätningarna. ”Allt tyder på att den progressiva epokens brinntid är slut”, skriver Mathisen som menar att landets vänster är splittrad och paralyserad.

DN:s ledarskribent Martin Liby Troein skriver att Bolsonaros framgångar är en konsekvens av den utdragna kris som plågat Brasilien i nästan fem år. Han lyfter att även vänstern pressas mot ytterkanten och har sökt sig tillbaka till radikala rötter. Om den relativt moderate kandidaten Fernando Haddad vinner kan landet i praktiken fortsätta styras av Lula da Silva, som behåller greppet om partiet PT från sin fängelsecell, skriver Martin Liby Troein.

bakgrund
 
Brasilianska valet
Wikipedia (en)
General elections are scheduled to be held in Brazil on 7 October 2018 to elect the President, Vice President and the National Congress. Elections for state Governors and Vice Governors, state Legislative Assemblies and Federal District Legislative Chamber will be held at the same time. The 2014 elections saw Workers' Party candidate Dilma Rousseff reelected as President in the second round with 51.6% of the vote, defeating Aécio Neves of the Brazilian Social Democracy Party who received 48.4% of the vote. Rousseff had first been elected in the 2010 elections, succeeding her political mentor, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, who was in office from 2003 until 2011. However, on 3 December 2015, impeachment proceedings against Rousseff were officially accepted by the Chamber of Deputies. On 12 May 2016, the Federal Senate temporarily suspended Rousseff's powers and duties for up to six months or until the Senate reached a verdict: to remove her from office if found guilty or to acquit her from the crimes charged. Vice President Michel Temer, of the Brazilian Democratic Movement Party, assumed her powers and duties as Acting President of Brazil during the suspension. On 31 August 2016, the Senate voted 61–20 in favor of impeachment, finding Rousseff guilty of breaking budgetary laws and removing her from office. Critics of the impeachment saw it as a legislative coup d'état, since the budgetary adjustments happened in her first term, and not after her re-election. Vice President Temer succeeded Rousseff as the 37th President of Brazil. His government implemented policies that contradicted the platform on which Rousseff's Workers Party had been elected, in one of the most controversial and politically-heated periods of modern Brazilian history.
Omni är politiskt obundna och oberoende. Vi strävar efter att ge fler perspektiv på nyheterna. Har du frågor eller synpunkter kring vår rapportering? Kontakta redaktionen