Bolsonaro and Brazil’s Illiberal Backlash

Issue Date January 2019
Volume 30
Issue 1
Page Numbers 68-82
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On 28 October 2018, far-right populist Jair Bolsonaro captured Brazil’s presidency following a highly polarized runoff election against Workers’ Party (PT) candidate Fernando Haddad. Multiple crises that have afflicted Brazil since 2013 and the blame Brazilians cast on establishment parties for these travails gave Bolsonaro his opening. Yet while prolonged economic recession, unprecedented corruption, and escalating crime rendered the PT and other major parties vulnerable, Bolsonaro leveraged his fringe status adroitly, sounding a “law and order” and anticorruption message that resonated strongly with the public. The incoming president’s authoritarian leanings and illiberal rhetoric present concerns for Brazil’s democracy.

About the Authors

Wendy Hunter

Wendy Hunter is professor of government at the University of Texas, Austin.

View all work by Wendy Hunter

Timothy J. Power

Timothy J. Power is head of the Social Sciences Division at Oxford University.

View all work by Timothy J. Power

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