It sounds like a distasteful joke, but Brazilians are on the verge of
electing a far-right president. After winning the first ballot on 7 October,
candidate Jair Messias Bolsonaro (Social Liberal Party) now leads the polls for
the second ballot enjoying 58% of voting intentions (considering only the valid
votes). It is difficult to estimate what this means to progressive
forces in Brazil.
Much more than a controversial figure, Bolsonaro has become
famous for expressing openly homophobic, unapologetically misogynist,
shamelessly racist and hysterically anti-communist views. The presidential
candidate represents the ugliest and most violent face of the global far-right
movement, currently on the rise in all corners of the world.
Bolsonaro stands out as the messiah of what many have dubbed a conservative counter-offensive in the making after decades of leftist governments.
A former military officer Bolsonaro
remained a marginal figure within Brazilian politics for the good part of his 27
years as a congressman. Only recently has the far-right candidate experienced a
stratospheric rise in notoriety. Bolsonaro stands out as the messiah of what
many have dubbed a conservative counter-offensive in the making after decades
of leftist governments.
His radical anti-leftist rhetoric
(accusing progressives of corrupting Brazilian democracy) and hyper-liberal
agenda (in defence of property and minimum state interference) seems to be especially appealing to those who were
“never left behind by anything”: the well-educated, male middle classes that
saw their privileges relatively undermined by small distributive gains during
the Worker Party’s administrations.
The “Bolsonaro effect” already raises serious questions regarding the relationship between violence and democracy in Brazil.
Despite a longstanding political career, Bolsonaro
managed to play the role of an “outsider” capable of cleansing the Brazilian
political system from a series of impurities (ranging from crime and corruption
scandals,
to Bolivarianism and “gender ideology”).
Seen as a joke by many, Bolsonaro became
a serious contender when Lula da Silva (the historic leader of the Worker’s
Party) was first imprisoned and later forced out of the presidential campaign on account of controversial corruptions charges.
To this very day, the
far-right leader shows ever stronger signs that he might, against all odds and
against all good sense, become the next president of Brazil.
Irrespective of the results, the “Bolsonaro effect” already raises
serious questions regarding the relationship between violence and democracy in
Brazil.
First and foremost, Bolsonaro’s constant flirtation with violent ideas
and behaviour is simply incompatible with the basic tenets of democracy.
The frontrunner has more than once expressed abject political views regarding the rights of minorities. He has condoned rape, stated that African-descendants are useless, and confessed he would rather see one of his sons dead than in the arms of another man.
The
frontrunner has more than once expressed abject political views regarding the
rights of minorities. He has condoned rape, stated that African-descendants are
useless, and confessed he would rather see one of his sons dead than in the
arms of another man.
Bolsonaro’s views on public security (and specially state-led
violence) are at best rudimentary and at worst truly frightening. A passionate
advocate of relaxed ownership laws for small weapons, Bolsonaro believes that a
police officer who does not kill is underserving of the blue uniform.
A stark supporter of the civic-military dictatorship (1964-1985),
the far-right leader has many a times expressed his admiration for former state
terrorists and agents of the political police.
In his view, the fact that
political dissidents were systematically tortured during the dictatorship is
not a problem. The real problem is that some of them survived.
Brazil is already an unacceptably violent country. Last year, more
than 60,000 people
were assassinated. Between 2003 and 2011, the number of homicides in Brazil (449,985) went well beyond the overall casualties of the Iraq War (251,000). Such high levels of violence include risks to the safety of
politicians and social leaders.
This year, the death of Marielle Franco
(Socialism and Liberty Party) – a black and LGBT rights activist, and
councillor, assassinated by unidentified suspects in Rio de Janeiro – spurred outrage and commotion throughout the World. Without
exaggeration, engaging in politics could well be classified as a high-risk job in
Brazil.
Even in a context marked by violence, no one can honestly and responsibly dismiss the risks that Bolsonaro’s strategy of embracing violence entails.In the past five years alone, at least 194 people were assassinated due
to political reasons. If we go back in time from 1979 onwards (when Brazil
was giving the first, baby steps towards transitioning from being a
civic-military dictatorship to a liberal democracy) the figure rises to
staggering 1345 documented cases.
Even in a context marked by violence, no one can honestly and
responsibly dismiss the risks that Bolsonaro’s strategy of embracing violence
entails.
There is a serious concern that the “Bolsonaro effect” could lead to an
even more sombre scenario, in which republican ties of conviviality are
dissolved.
So far, Bolsonaro has done very little to dispel this risk. On the
contrary, expressing a trademark contempt for civility, the far-right leader
jokingly suggested during one of his political rallies that “supporters of the
Worker’s Party should be gunned down”.
To make things worse, days after his reproachable
comment, Bolsonaro himself was the victim of a failed assassination attempt.
The candidate was stabbed by a member of the public during one of his rallies,
in the city of Juiz de Fora, state of Minas Gerais.
Similar to what happened in Britain after the Brexit
vote, a series of violent incidents involving far-right supporters have been
reported on social media after Bolsonaro’s resounding victory in the first
ballot. These range from verbal aggression (including chants that Bolsonaro
will order the deaths of LGBT people) and multiple beatings to gruesome
episodes.
Two cases worth mentioning involve far-right supporters carving up a swastika
on the flesh of an anti-fascist activist, and murdering a capoeira master,
stabbed 12 times for voting for the Worker’s Party candidate, Haddad.
Brazil was no paradise
before it was seized by the “Bolsonaro effect”, but there is now a palpable
fear that a bad situation could significantly worsen.
The question of political
violence
Bolsonaro’s endorsement of political violence has even managed to
scare the fervently anti-leftist liberal media. Alluding to the murder of
political leaders and dismissing death threats to advocates of specific causes obviously
leads to the question of a form of violence that is inherently political (terrorism,
however defined it may be, could also be inserted here, but let’s not
complicate things further).
If the far-right candidate wins the Brazilian elections, the issue of political violence is likely to take to the news once again.
The relationship seems obvious. Political violence refers
to the instrumental use of violence (in whichever way or form) in order to
achieve a certain political goal, or in this case, to prevent others from doing
so. If the far-right candidate wins the Brazilian elections, the issue of
political violence is likely to take to the news once again.
But fearing Bolsonaro for his failure to reproach political violence
has some limitations. In theory the concept of political violence works well.
It is clean, easy to understand and provides an immediate account of which acts
are not to be tolerated under democratic rule (such as murdering those you
disagree with). But in practice, things are always more complicated.
To speak
of “political violence” requires clear definitions of what both politics and
violence mean. In other words, in order to classify an act as such we have to make
uncomfortable, and many times unhelpful distinctions between which motives are
political, and even worse, which actions can fit into the category of violence.
There are also further complications. The concept of political violence
mobilises a liberal tradition of blaming that struggles with complex chains of
responsibility and assumes clear-cut distinctions between those who perpetrate
and those who are the victims of violence. In practice, things are never that
simple.
Effectively, the concept of political violence creates a series of
problematic and arbitrary distinctions that end up concealing the ways in which
violence is embedded in our modern societies.
A couple of examples might
clarify the issue. Often. drug-related homicides are not treated as political
violence (for the absence of a clear “political” motive) even though they are
clearly affected by a certain politics (from policing, to the criminalisation
of drugs).
Why aren’t deaths caused by austerity cuts to social welfare seen as political violence? Isn’t dying a form of violence? Aren’t fiscal policy choices political?
Likewise, the assassination of “adulterous” partners (sic), a crime
that disproportionately affects ex-wives or ex-girlfriends, is often treated as
a personal/passional crime and not as a political crime as such, even though feminists
have tirelessly reminded us that the personal is deeply political.
We could go
on. Why aren’t deaths caused by austerity cuts to social welfare seen as
political violence? Isn’t dying a form of violence? Aren’t fiscal policy
choices political?
There is an endless list of other real-case examples where a
rigorous and honest distinction between what constitutes political violence and
what doesn’t is nearly impossible.
In other words, violence always betrays a
certain politics even when its motivations are not seen as properly political.
Structuring violence
A much more helpful way of looking at the relationship between violence
and democracy in contemporary Brazil would be to avoid an excessive focus on
the question of political violence (although it obviously matters) and to try
and analyse the “Bolsonaro effect” through more holistic and systemic lenses.
This
means understanding that the relationship between violence and politics is much
deeper and, sadly more sedimented within the fabrics of Brazilian democracy.
Movements
normalising or advocating violence always happen in specific historical and
social contexts and are as much responses to the circumstances in which they
happen as they are somehow enabled by them.
The institutional racism that is still rampant throughout the world, and particularly in Brazil, would be violent because it prevents people of colour from realising the liberal promises of equal treatment.
Attempts to understand violence from a holistic and systemic perspective
have long defined what one could loosely call the field of violence studies.
Some,
like Norwegian scholar Johan Galtung, famously argued that violence also has a
structural face, expressed as a series of impediments to the full realisation
of human potentials.
In this account, the institutional racism that is still rampant
throughout the world, and particularly in Brazil, would be violent because it prevents
people of colour from realising the liberal promises of equal treatment.
We
could also say, borrowing from Amartya Sen’s somehow similar thesis, that the
features of socio-economic underdevelopment (such as lack of access to
education, sanitation and secure housing) also constitute forms of structural
violence.
With one of the highest levels of inequality in the world, with more
than half the adult population without basic education and with 61% of the population
without access to safely managed sanitation services, Brazil is certainly defined by
high levels of structural violence.
These violent impediments to the full realisation of human potential (exclusion, exploitation and repression) are mechanisms that have long played a crucial function in the process of capital accumulation.
But as the Marxist tradition suggests, violence is not only structural
but it is also a structuring factor of
modern capitalist societies. In other words, impediments to the full
realisation of human potential are not simply barriers that can be lifted by economic
development and the strengthening of institutions.
These violent impediments to
the full realisation of human potential (exclusion, exploitation and
repression) are mechanisms that have long played a crucial function in the process
of capital accumulation.
According to this current of thought, the exclusion of
large masses of the global population from the promises of liberalism is not a
flaw, but a pre-condition for the smooth functioning of the ways in which we
produce and distribute wealth. Quite simply, without dispossession there is no impulse
to work.
Without the impulse to work there is no worker. And with no worker
there is no industry. The consequence is that, in order to produce at an
ever-increasing rate, capitalist societies have to constantly reproduce a
certain level of insecurity (the fear of joblessness, the fear of mounting
debt, the fear of capital flight and etc…).
It is no exaggeration to say that Brazilian history is the history of
enforcing a brutal compulsion to work via the dispossession of the most basic
rights. Since the days of colonial slavery, local authorities strived to secure
high returns on investments by producing a state of generalised social
insecurity.
And at no point did the connection between accumulation, violence
and insecurity become clearer than during Bolsonaro’s beloved dictatorship
(1964-1985).
Generously supported by business, the authoritarian regime
liberalised capital flows, violently repressed strikes, and systematically
reduced real wages.
In effect, decades of violent insecurity have created an atmosphere in Brazil where life itself is seen as disposable.
And the sad realisation is that, whereas the transition to
democracy (1985-1988) managed to democratise the political sphere, the
Brazilian economy remained tied to the authoritarian-like dictates of neoliberalism.
The democratic New Republic (1988-?) was characterised by the undisputed rule
of austerity (sucking even the once socialist Worker’s Party into its ranks), fluctuating
levels of informality and unemployment, the permeant blackmail caused by fear
of capital flights, and the decision to privilege
“law and order” policies over the protection of basic human rights.
Some of
these elements were mitigated by decades of leftist governments, but it might
have been too little, too late. In effect, decades of violent insecurity have
created an atmosphere in Brazil where life itself is seen as disposable.
The
disregard for life that defines the “Bolsonaro effect” is nothing but the most
recent, and most extreme expression of the general disregard for life that has
structured contemporary Brazil.
Violence and the failure of
democracy
However we chose to understand violence, one thing is undisputable: violence
is always bad for democracy. The immediate effect of violent acts can be
catastrophic to political life. As Hannah Arendt once brilliantly put it,
political violence is unpredictable as it risks destroying the foundational
promises of collective life.
When invisible violence is left unaddressed for too long, as it has been in Brazil, then it is no wonder that society becomes a fertile ground for the
type of authoritarianism demonstrated by Bolsonaro and his supporters.
Liberal segments see this violence as the imminent
danger posed by the “Bolsonaro effect”: the danger of authoritarianism and radicalisation.
But we cannot forget that Brazilian democracy has already been struck from
within, by the silent and invisible threat posed by structural forms of violence (such as exploitation and exclusion).
When this invisible violence is left unaddressed for too long, as they have been in Brazil, then it is no wonder that society becomes a fertile ground for the type of authoritarianism demonstrated by Bolsonaro and his supporters.
Not
everything is lost, though. There is still a slim, but real chance that
Fernando Haddad (Worker’s Party) might win the second ballot.
This would be a
first, vital step in the struggle to halt the rise of the far-right. But even
in a best-case scenario, the “Bolsonaro effect” will not stop unless something
is done about the structural and structuring forms of violence that exist in
Brazil. And this is the real challenge faced by the left.