Analysis-Bolsonaro calls rallies to flex muscle on Brazil's bicentennial
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[September 06, 2022]
By Ricardo Brito and Anthony Boadle
BRASILIA (Reuters) - Brazil's President
Jair Bolsonaro is calling supporters to attend street rallies alongside
Independence Day military parades on Wednesday, a showing that may gauge
support for the far-right leader's attacks on democratic institutions
ahead of an October election.
In the capital Brasilia, security officials are bracing for a crowd of
500,000 people on the central mall, which Bolsonaro will address after
overseeing the traditional military parade marking 200 years of Brazil's
independence from Portugal.
Police have reinforced security along the grassy esplanade to prevent
any efforts to advance on the Supreme Court, where they threatened to
march a year ago in a demonstration inspired by the Jan. 6, 2021 assault
on the U.S. Capitol.
Bolsonaro's attacks against Brazil's voting system – and the courts that
run it – have stirred calls for a military coup from his radical
backers. Some fear he is laying the groundwork to claim electoral fraud
like his U.S. ally, former President Donald Trump, and reject any
victory by leftist rival Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, which polls show
leading the race ahead of an Oct. 2 vote.
Bolsonaro has claimed the polls are skewed, the courts favor Lula and
that Brazil's electronic voting is rife with fraud, without providing
proof. When pressed on national TV two weeks ago, he said he would
respect the election result as long as voting is "clean and
transparent," without defining any criteria.
Bolsonaro's rhetoric on election integrity and the electoral courts will
come under close scrutiny on Wednesday, along with his efforts to blur
the lines between military celebrations and his own presidential
campaign.
Bolsonaro, a former army captain who has told supporters the army is "on
our side," pushed to transform a traditional Independence Day military
display in Rio de Janeiro into a second political rally on Wednesday
afternoon.
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People walk past a poster depicting
Brazil?s President Jair Bolsonaro with the phrase ?Bolsonaro in
jail? at Paulista Avenue in Sao Paulo, Brazil, January 13, 2022.
REUTERS/Carla Carniel/File Photo
Army brass balked at an initial proposal to march troops and tanks
along the famous Copacabana Beach, but have reached a compromise
with the commander-in-chief. Bolsonaro will accompany symbolic
cannon fire, paratrooper displays, air force acrobatics and a naval
parade before addressing a political rally there.
The rallies in Rio and Brasilia will fire up Bolsonaro's core
supporters, but he runs the risk of boosting high rejection numbers
if his rhetoric runs hot, as it did on Independence Day last year.
At the time, he insulted Supreme Court Justice Alexandre Moraes and
threatened to disobey his rulings – comments he soon walked back
under intense political pressure.
Moraes, now in charge of Brazil's top electoral court, has not
flinched in his showdowns with Bolsonaro and his backers. Last month
he authorized police raids of businessmen supporting the president
after a media report accused them of discussing a coup if he loses
in October.
Bolsonaro's campaign managers have advised him to avoid attacks on
the judiciary, but they could not rule out a repeat of last year.
"No one can hold Bolsonaro back. His core supporters are infuriated
now by Moraes and will show it on Sept. 7," said a source in the
president's campaign who was not authorized to speak freely.
(Reporting by Ricardo Brito and Anthony Boadle; Editing by Brad
Haynes and Richard Chang)
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