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New symbols of the “left and right” confrontation: Andrés Manuel López Obrador and Jair Bolsonaro

Latinoamerica 1Today, Latin America is once again entering an era of change. The coming to power of new leaders in Mexico and Brazil not only reflects the historical path of these states, but also of the region as a whole. As international observers have noted, if the Mexican president is an experienced and traditional politician for the region, then the Brazilian leader, as it were, began to “drift” towards neo-fascism before taking office. This time the “LACRUS” team decided to compare the political portraits of the two new leaders, identify similarities and differences, and also note the main expectations of the region from the coming to power of their governments.

On December 1, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who won the election of the President of Mexico in July of this year, officially became head of state for the period 2018-2024. López Obrador became the first in the past few years, the president of Mexico with “leftist” views: before that, the country was headed by presidents from the centrist Institutional Revolutionary Party (Spanish – Partido Revolucionario Institucional, PRI) and twice from the right-wing conservative National Action Party (Spanish – Partido Acción Nacional, PAN). However, many international observers point out that the new Mexican president from the “left” keeps to the traditions established by Benito Juárez in the 19th century, yet he left the reformist wing of the Institutional Revolutionary Party. He is an experienced and quite popular politician in the region. López Obrador is a typical product of Mexican political culture, rather than a number of such famous populists from South America, as the ex-leaders of Venezuela and Ecuador: Hugo Chávez and Rafael Correa, or the current president Bolivia Evo Morales.Reunion mandatarios ultimo encuentro Bolivia LRZIMA20131002 0019 11 1

Unlike such populist leaders as Juan Domingo Perón, the same Hugo Chávez or Jair Bolsonaro, López Obrador was never a fan of revolution and coups. Turning to the dramatic past of Mexico, it is worth noting that there is hardly anyone resembling the current leader, although this article is not about populism, it examines a single-party state, which was transformed in a very “tough” way into a democratic one.

Named by the long-awaited “left turn”, the arrival of the populist governments of the “national and popular” sense in the region of Latin America was then the dream of its adherents that came true. However, the task of putting all the “left” governments under one common denominator seems to be very difficult, because as time has shown, some of them were in reality very different and even completely diverse. One way or another, today there are practically no radical “left” in the region, with the exception of Evo Morales in Bolivia and Nicolás Maduro in Venezuela. The latter has moved away from populism itself, which is a form of authoritarian democracy, in order to come closer to its opposite side – dictatorship.

JLA AndresManuelLopezObradorSwornIn 1As already emphasized earlier, López Obrador is not at all “out of camp” of populists, but even if he were, he would have no partners in Latin American governments. In addition, the new Mexican leader has repeatedly stated during his election campaign that he will be guided by the principle: “the best foreign policy is good domestic policy”. In turn, the elected president of Brazil, Bolsonaro, will strive to ensure that Brazil occupies a central role in the process of “consolidation” in Latin America of the “new political course”, which, according to him, “was born” with his election victory. Jair Bolsonaro repeatedly noted that “everyone” in the region “knows what the consequences of the government of the left” are. With the election of leaders in these two countries, it’s quite obvious that López Obrador is in Mexico, and Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil are new symbols of confrontation between the “left” and “right” forces, respectively; however, the global Mexican president is still less a prominent representative of his wing than the Brazilian.

However, it is worth paying attention that none of the leaders considered in this article represents what at first glance seems, and yet they cannot be identified with the two sides of the “same coin”. In the economic sphere, for example, in Mexico, there was no serious alternative to neoliberalism since the 1980s of the XX century, and Bolsonaro in Brazil acted as an ardent defender of the “free market”. The Mexican and Brazilian leaders are, in fact, antagonists, but if López Obrador does not strive for regional, and even more global, domination, then Bolsonaro could act as a “disconnecting person” at the international level. Before taking office, he promised the whole world to follow the policy of Donald Trump, made a reservation about his intention to transfer the Brazilian embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, withdraw from the Paris Agreement, and also “fell” with harsh criticism on the MERCOSUR (Spanish – Mercado Común del Sur).

FILE PHOTO A supporter of Federal deputy B 43355288 1Today, no one has any doubt that the new governments of Mexico and Brazil reflect the historical path of their states and the region as a whole, however, their direction does not make them an example of populism. López Obrador and Bolsonaro are charismatic leaders, not just people from the masses, who, at the same time, have been professionally engaged in politics for decades, as if striving to take up positions of “anti-politics”. The Mexican leader still symbolizes a rather traditional politician, and Bolsonaro, on the contrary, is already striving to look like a radical populist who may be “drifting” towards neo-fascism.

As a number of political analysts emphasize, Bolsonaro balances on the very border between the fascist dictatorship and the democratic form of populism, especially when he speaks, he vaguely resembles Colonel Perón or Getulio Vargas (much more – Hitler and Mussolini). In turn, López Obrador tries to return to the old traditions and foundations of Mexican politics, especially to those that were laid during the presidency of Lázaro Cárdenas.

218855 600 1The Mexican president declares that he wants to convince all “dissidents”, and also speaks of “power mafias”, although so far he is refraining from complete “demonization” of the opposition. But Jair Bolsonaro uses very different approaches. In this case, it is not necessary to talk about populism when there are no interlocutors or opponents. According to Bolsonaro at the Latin American Right Party Congress, organized a month ago by his son in the Brazilian city of Foz do Iguaçu: “it is necessary to destroy all the left forces in the country”. It turns out that such a direct threat to democracy comes from the elected president of the fourth largest democratic country on the planet. It turns out that the Brazilian question will now consist only in how Bolsonaro will rule the state: as Trump’s loyal ally, like Pinochet or Mussolini. The situation in Mexico is far from the Brazilian scenario. The main Mexican dilemma is how much a new leader will differ about his predecessors.

Summing up, it is worth noting that the difference between the new political models in Brazil and Mexico is not the difference between populism in its “left” and “right” versions. The Mexican leader did not conduct an election campaign in the spirit of populism. In turn, during the campaign, Bolsonaro had more fascist slogans than populist slogans. Many representatives of the political elite of Brazil draw attention to the fact that his “myth” lies in the fact that he considers himself an epochal figure, the sole exponent of the will of the Brazilian nation, and often thinks in categories that go beyond political analysis.

At the same time, there are real opportunities for Mexico to strengthen democracy. The immediate future will show whether she can do it, or the Mexicans, led by López Obrador, will miss the chance to “take” a democratic revenge. However, democracy in Mexico is safe, which cannot be said about Brazil since the 1st of January of this year.

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