Brazil's Bolsonaro does not concede to Lula, but authorizes transition
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[November 02, 2022]
By Ricardo Brito, Brian Ellsworth and Rodrigo Viga Gaier
BRASILIA/SAO PAULO/RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters)
-Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro on Tuesday did not concede defeat in
his first public remarks since losing Sunday's election, saying protests
by his supporters were the fruit of "indignation and a sense of
injustice" over the vote.
However, he stopped short of contesting the election result and
authorized his chief of staff, Ciro Nogueira, to begin the transition
process with representatives of leftist President-elect Luiz Inacio Lula
da Silva.
It took Bolsonaro, a right-wing nationalist, more than 44 hours to
comment after the election was decided by electoral authorities, with
the delay raising fears he would seek to cast doubt on the narrow
result.
Amid his silence, supporters blocked highways to protest his defeat,
with some calling for a military coup to stop former president Lula from
returning to power.
The highway blockades have disrupted fuel distribution, supermarket
supplies, and the flow of grains exports to major ports, according to
industry groups.
In his brief national address, Bolsonaro joked that journalists would
miss him, thanked those who voted for him and said he would abide by the
constitution, which stipulates a transition of power on Jan. 1.
"The current popular movements are the fruit of indignation and a sense
of injustice about the way the electoral process took place," he said.
He said protesters should avoid destroying property or "impeding the
right to come and go," but did not tell them to return home.
"Bolsonaro has not put out this fire. He spoke to his hardcore
supporters without criticizing the demonstrators on the highways," said
political risk analyst Andre Cesar at Hold Legislative Advisors in
Brasilia. "He is keeping his more extremist followers mobilized."
Karina Laurinda, 34, who took part in highway demonstrations outside of
Sao Paulo, said she would keep protesting.
"Even if he says to calm down, not to react, we're still going to react
because we won't accept a Lula government," she said.
LULA CONTACTS
Bolsonaro's chief of staff and Vice President Hamilton Mourao have begun
to make contact with the Lula camp to discuss a transition. Other
allies, including the speaker of the lower house of Congress, have
called since Sunday for the Bolsonaro government to respect the election
result.
In a statement, the Supreme Court said it considered that, by
authorizing the government transition, Bolsonaro was recognizing the
result of the election.
During a meeting later on Tuesday between Bolsonaro and several Supreme
Court justices, the president acknowledged clearly that Lula had won the
election, according to two of the justices who took part.
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Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro
arrives to give a press statement at the Alvorada Palace in
Brasilia, Brazil November 1, 2022. REUTERS/Adriano Machado
"It cleared the air, without a doubt. It seemed to turn the page,"
said one of the judges, who requested anonymity to discuss the
meeting frankly.
"The message was: game over," said the other judge. "He didn't
criticize the electoral system or the courts."
Before Sunday's vote, Bolsonaro repeatedly made baseless claims that
the electoral system was open to fraud and accused electoral
authorities of favoring his leftist adversary.
Bolsonaro did not directly repeat those claims on Tuesday. But his
reference to "injustice" in the electoral process showed he had
learned from the post-presidency of U.S. President Donald Trump, his
ideological ally, according to Leonardo Barreto, political analyst
at Vector Consultancy in Brasilia.
Trump has continued to repeat false claims that the 2020 U.S.
election was "stolen" by widespread fraud and retains a significant
core of supporters who believe them.
"He is going to copy Trump for the next four years to keep his
conservative movement alive," said Barreto, forecasting that the
2026 election would be a rematch between Bolsonaro and Lula's
Workers Party.
Lula's victory represents a stunning comeback for the 77-year-old
former metalworker, who spent 19 months in jail for corruption
convictions before they were annulled last year.
Lula has vowed to overturn many of Bolsonaro's policies, including
pro-gun measures and weak protection of the Amazon rainforest. His
aides confirmed on Tuesday that he would attend this month's COP27
United Nations climate summit in Egypt.
Lula's centrist running mate, former Sao Paulo Governor Geraldo
Alckmin, will coordinate the transition, the Workers Party announced
on Tuesday, with the help of party leader Gleisi Hoffmann and former
Education Minister Aloizio Mercadante.
Nogueira, Bolsonaro's chief of staff, told journalists that the
president had authorized him to begin the transition process with
Alckmin once his name is formally submitted on Thursday.
(Reporting by Ricardo Brito, Marcela Ayres and Anthony Boadle in
Brasilia, and Brian Ellsworth, Nayara Figuereido and Gabriel Araujo
in Sao Paulo; Editing by Brad Haynes, Alistair Bell, Rosalba O'Brien
& Shri Navaratnam)
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