Some Bolsonaro supporters have called for a military takeover of Brazil Why do they wave the American flag
SÃO PAULO â" On the day when Brazilians celebrated the nationâs independence, when thousands of protesters this month called on President Jair Bolsonaro to lead a military takeover of the country, a middle-aged man set out onto the streets of Brazilâs largest city, cloaked in the flag.
The American flag.
Wilson Gomes, 56, strutted down streets thronged by thousands of Bolsonaro supporters, the Stars and Stripes draped across his right shoulder, demanding radical change in Latin Americaâs largest nation. The time had come to do away with the Brazilian supreme court, which he said had been corrupted by a kleptocratic left and was unfairly targeting Bolsonaro and his supporters. The only way to save the constitution, he said, was to suspend it.
âThey want to plant communism and socialism,â he said. âHow can we live in such a country?â
In recent months, as Brazil has grown ever more polarized by Bolsonaro, blamed by many Brazilians for the countryâs disastrous coronavirus response, an overt American iconography has become an increasing fixture among the hard-line supporters rallying to his defense.
At far-right rallies all over the country, where many have called for the supreme court and opposition lawmakers to be imprisoned, the American flag has become a staple. Supporters wear cowboy hats and belt buckles emblazoned with Texas longhorns. One man in Brasilia this month shaded himself with an American flag baseball hat. Another strode down São Pauloâs Avenida Paulista dressed as a U.S. country sheriff. A viral meme among supporters shows Bolsonaro, clad in a green-and-gold version of Captain Americaâs uniform with the words that open the U.S. Constitution: âWE THE PEOPLE!â
In a country that has more traditionally viewed the United States and its intentions with suspicion, the sudden appropriation of American symbols has been striking, exposing a political paradox at the heart of the Bolsonarista movement. A group that many here believe want to subvert, if not overthrow, Brazilian democracy has chosen as one of its banners the flag of the worldâs oldest democracy.
âThe whole thing is contradictory,â said Fernanda Magnotta, a senior fellow at the Brazilian Center of International Relations. âThe Brazilian right is a nationalist group, and it is using flags that belong to other countries.â
Bolsonaristas, she said, are taking their cues straight from the top. Bolsonaro visited President Donald Trump at the White House and Mar-a-Lago. Trump this month praised Bolsonaro and his sons as âgreat people.â Strategist Stephen K. Bannon championed right-wing political thinker and Bolsonaro ally Olavo de Carvalho. Former Trump senior adviser Jason Miller traveled here this month to meet Brazilian conservatives. And Donald Trump Jr. agreed to be a guest speaker at the Brazilian version of the Conservative Political Action Conference.
Here, the American flag â" and the idea of the United States â" is being interpreted in a fully Brazilian context. For much of the past two decades, the country was governed by leftist leaders. They cozied up to socialist powers in the region and presided over a period of economic growth. But as the boom years gave way to a period of stagnation that continues to this day, they came to be associated in the minds of many Brazilians with pervasive corruption and bureaucratic rot.
One former president was jailed. Another impeached. And a new cadre of right-wing leaders rose, positioning themselves as the opposite of leftist governance. They wouldnât partner with socialist Venezuela or communist Cuba. They would be allies with the capitalistic United States, home to several right-wing Brazilian thought leaders.
One of them was Carvalho, who lived in rural Virginia, where he flew an American flag, named his dog Big Mac, collected rifles and posted YouTube paeans to personal liberty and condemnations of what he called the globalist left. An early Carvalho student was Bolsonaroâs son, Eduardo Bolsonaro, who traveled to Virginia to attend a Carvalho seminar. âGreatest living Brazilian philosopher,â Eduardo Bolsonaro once declared.
Carvalho was an early supporter of Trump, whom he described in March 2016 as the âonly viable Republican candidate.â Soon Eduardo Bolsonaro was posting his own support for Trump on social media, going so far as to hoist a Trump-Pence campaign sign shortly after the 2016 election.
Guilherme Casarões, a Brazilian political scientist who monitors Brazilâs far-right, said Trumpâs victory was a catalyst and unifying force for a movement here that had been diffuse and poorly organized.
âTrump dismantled the establishment,â Casarões said. âFrom there, there was a clear signal that if an alternative form of the right could win an election in the United States, it could be brought into Brazil.â
Once Jair Bolsonaro soared into the presidential palace in 2019, the ideological partnership tightened. Bannon, who served as an informal adviser to Bolsonaro during his 2018 campaign, took an interest in Carvalho, saying he wanted to install him as a lecturer at an intellectual training camp. He then named Eduardo Bolsonaro as the Latin American leader of the movement âto reclaim sovereignty from progressive globalist elitist forces.â
âThe Brazilian right and American have an agenda in common,â said Sèrgio SantâAna, president of the right-wing Conservative Liberal Institute. âItâs natural that people identify with each other and unite. The use of images is because the ideas and values are similar.â
But for the Brazilian right, the American flag is deployed not as a symbol of a diverse, pluralist society â" the United States in its entirety â" but as a cudgel to convey a conservative donât-tread-on-me ethos.
âThey are saying, âWeâre not communists. We are like the Americans. We are capitalists,â â Magnotta said. âIt is like something out of the Cold War, something that doesnât fit in this era, a clash between the communists and the capitalists.â
During Bolsonaroâs first year in office, conservatives here launched CPAC Brasil, a cousin to the conference held in the United States. During that first gathering, an auditorium full of Brazilians chanted Trumpâs name. The programâs website is festooned with American flags and images of the 45th U.S. president.
At this yearâs conference, held this month, Donald Trump Jr. warned in a streamed address that Brazil faced two choices in its presidential election next year: Liberty or socialism. Miller met with Bolsonaro â" and then was questioned by Brazilian authorities as part of a national investigation into misinformation.
Brian Winter, vice president for policy at Americas Society/Council of the Americas, said he was unsurprised by how much attention American conservatives have given Brazil.
âItâs a country where the right openly professes its adulation of the Republican ideal and what Brazil should look like,â he said.
But for Bolsonaro, Winter warned, modeling his movement on Trumpism carries political risks. Brazil is not the United States. Many of the most combustible cultural clashes there â" gun rights, abortion, racism â" donât resonate with the same force here. What Winter described as the âtransmission of the Fox News agenda into Brazilâ doesnât make much sense in a country where nearly 20 million people have recently gone hungry, the unemployment rate is at a record high and polls show a majority of Brazilians want Bolsonaro to be impeached.
âHe needs to stop cloaking himself in the American flag and start cloaking himself in the Brazilian one if he wants to get reelected,â Winter said.
Many of his most ardent supporters disagree.
One is Jean Felipe Santos de Souza, 29. During protests this month to call for the removal of the supreme court, he stood outside its judicial chambers wearing an American flag around his waist. Signs calling for the suspension of Brazilâs constitutional system fluttered around him.
âMilitary intervention now!â one read. âPresident Bolsonaro, we support any decision you have,â read another. âUse the Armed Forces, Mr. President,â another urged.
Santos de Souza pulled the American flag tighter around his hips.
âIn one way or another, what the right in the United States and the right in Brazil wants is liberty,â he said.
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