Socialism or barbarism in Brazil
The crisis of the left around the world has opened up a
vacuum for extreme right movements to gain traction and threaten our
democracies.
What Francis Fukuyama called the ‘end of history’ after the fall
of the Berlin Wall in 1989, in other words, the end of the fight between the
ideologies of the left and the right in the post-Cold War world, and the
triumph of liberal democracy as the only political path, lost its relevance
thirty years later.
One of the most influential modern thinkers that has
positioned himself against this idea of the end of history is Portuguese
sociologist and left-wing intellectual, Boaventura de Sousa Santos.
De Sousa Santos has pointed out that
the democratic decline that we are currently experiencing, and the solution to
said decline, has everything to do with ideology.
In his recent book “Left of the world, unite!”, he analyses
various cases of democratic decline around the world and proposes an ideal solution:
only a union of left wing forces is capable of containing the capitalist system
that, it its wildest version, has eroded the civil, human and political rights of the marginalised
classes in the world over the years.
Neoliberalism: a dark
force
The key point in De Sousa Santo’s argument is that whilst
previously, democracy was a force that was able to contain capitalism by creating
a system of controls that involved state intervention in the economy to
mitigate the most unforgiving abuses of the financial regime, now the tables
have turned.
What we now see is a type of neoliberal capitalism that controls
our democracies, and that shapes them according to the needs of the market and
the financial elites. For De Sousa Santos, this evolution towards an unforgiving
neoliberalist strain of capitalism is natural, given that hard capitalism, and its final goal of accumulating wealth and power in the hands of the few, is
intrinsically incompatible with democracy.
Capitalism due to its very nature,
constantly seeks greater accumulation of wealth and goods, and consequently
depends on a structure that includes some and excludes many.
Democracy on the
other hand seeks the greatest level of citizen participation possible, a
widening of both political and human rights and a more equal society where nobody is excluded.
For De Sousa Santos, to understand the evolutions that we are currently
experiencing, it is essential to understand the three axes of domination that
generate the inequalities that characterise the current social system: capitalism,
colonialism, and the patriarchy.
Upon exporting and reinforcing privitisation and the primacy of the market, supported strongly by US imperialism, neoliberal globalisation facilitated the erosion of the social democratic state.
Colonialism, as a generator of race
inequality, the patriarchy as a generator of gender inequality, and capitalism,
as a generator of economic inequality and a reinforce of the other two axes.
Upon exporting and reinforcing privitisation and the primacy
of the market, supported strongly by what De Sousa Santos instits is nothing but US imperialism, neoliberal globalisation
facilitated the erosion of the social democratic state.
But this US imperialism is
not the same as that which John Pilger referred to in his documentary ‘The War
on Democracy’ a decade ago.
His reports of impositions of dictatorships and of
invasions by military forces propped up by the CIA in Latin America in past decades, correspond
to a situation that has eveolved significantly, but has developed into an equally invasive threat today. It may
appear more subtle in nature, but it is certainly no less dangerous: the
promotion and financing of what, in the words of the Portuguese sociologist, are “market friendly democracy initiatives through
libertarian and evangelical non-governmental organisations”.
Democratic decline in
Brazil and the deterioration of the left
Brazil is an example of how the inequalities that De Sousa
Santos identifies can manifest themselves openly and savagely.
The country has
one of the highest Gini coefficients in the world (a measure of inequality of
the World Bank), and the highest of Latin America at 0,513 in 2015, and it has
recently become the latest country to fall victim to the rise of the extreme
right, with the presidential win of ex-military hard man Jair Bolsonaro, known
for his racist, sexist, homophobic, and ultra-neoliberal positions.
Hut how such a dramatic swing could happen? Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and the Workers Party (PT) taked power for the first time in Brazil in 2002 with 61% of the votes and as the
first left wing force to govern the country, and arrived at the presidential
palace as a moderate left-wing force that, through the years, had gradually
lost its socialist character to become a party that, while still defending an increased state
control of the economy, it also favoured the neoliberal capitalist system.
But the empire of the PT would last until 2016, when the
impeachment of ex-president Dilma Rousseff ended it abruptly. During its 14 years of governance,
the Gini coefficient improved by 8 points thanks to the introduction of
redistributive policies, an increase in the minimum wage, and expansion of
credit for the popular classes.
However, after being defeated by two far right leaders, fisrt by Michel Temer in a parliamentary coup, and then Jair Bolsonaro at the polls, the PT found itself in the most
acute crisis it has experienced to this date. There are many factors that could explain the electoral cataclysm, but some analysts have attributed the results of the last election to the fact that the levels of
rejection of the PT (antipetismo) among popular classes were higher than the levels of support for
Bolsonaro, across the board. It was this antipetismo what catapulted the excentric far-right leader to victory.
In any case, the causes are complex, but it is
important to understand what such a drastic change will mean in real terms for
Brazil and for the progressive forces that tried to rule the country over the last decade and a half. An explanation favoured by the De Sousa Santos points out to the existence of a ‘deep
Brazil’, that he also describes as the invisible Brazil, where the huge disappointment of the marginalised and impoverished majority, who felt left to its own devices to confront violence and dire inequality, seemingly became
one of the main sources of a deep antipetismo that drove many people to vote for Bolsonaro.
In his analysis, the Portuguese professor claims that this
majority had no access to political discourse, and in this context, evangelical
churches would act to replace this absence and offer an alternative narrative that resonated deeply in their souls.
This is the majority that felt abandoned by the governments of the PT,
and suffered the great environmental and human costs incurred throughout the
implementation of their social and developmental policies relating to mining,
agribusiness, and mega-projects such as hydroelectric dams, and the stadiums
built for the Olympic Games and the World Cup.
On many occasions, the PT, although it defined itself as a
party of the left, lost oits roots and operated within the same neoliberal frameworks that their
right-wing counterparts openly promote. Voters, it is said, always prefer the original to the copy.
A clear example of such policies is the construction, during the governments of
Lula and Rousseff, of the Belo Monte dam, which was carried out in the
river Xingú on indigenous territory, without respecting the right of these
communities to prior consultation.
This disappointment with the PT could be seen even before the previous elections, when the public survey on voter intention by DataFolha from the 10th of October showed that indigenous voters preferred Bolsonaro by 41% to 37% for Haddad.
Even though the Federal Court of the region
declared that the project was inconstitutional, the Supreme Court returned the
licence to the construction company and demanded the works immediately
recommence in the name of the negative "economic effects" on Brazil of its non-construction.
This deep disappointment with the PT could be seen even before
the previous elections, when the public survey on voter intention by DataFolha
from the 10th of October showed that indigenous voters preferred Bolsonaro
by 41% to 37% for Haddad.
The role of the US
and democratic decline
De Sousa Santos is keen to underline that neoliberal imperial intervention
originating from the US influenced decisively the results of the Brazilian
elections.
According to his view, some US millionaires with strong interests in deterring state
interference in the economy, redistribution, and development projects, felt
that the country had to regress back to the neoliberal market that once
determined its functioning so that US companies could exploit natural resources
and access the free market according to their will.
One of the main pillars of this "imperial" intervention is the
incitement of social protest through social media, using civil institutions and
organisations to represent their interests with fake news and misinformation.
Together with this pillar is that of intervention in the
judicial system, which managed to implant a highly politicised anti-corruption
investigation, Lava Jato, that sent Lula da Silva to jail whilst leaving many
politicians of the right equally accused of corruption completely untouched.
It is an established fact that fake news spread across social networks have been the
protagonist of these past elections in Brazil. The role of the US in this
process is ambiguous yet present nonetheless. An investigation by Mídia Ninja (a left-wing digital news outlet) demonstrated that many WhatsApp groups that were spreading fake news in favour
of Bolsonaro originated in the US, and the far-right figure, who decisively
intervened in the election of Trump by spreading fake news en masse, Mr. Steve
Bannon, met with Eduardo Bolsonaro bdfore the election and they agreed that Bannon would advise him
throughout his father’s campaign.
What De Sousa Santos fails to address is the key, inispensible complicity of
the Brazilian elites in the continued spinning of the US funded neoliberal
wheel of fortune, whether or not they have direct links to the US, and without
which a far-right victory would have been impossible.
An investigation by the
BBC shows that there were far more fake news groups in favour of Bolsonaro on
WhatsApp than for any other candidate, meanwhile the Caixa2 scandal revealed an
extensive network of Brazilian entrepreneurs paying millions of dollars to
flood social media and WhatsApp with fake news against Haddad.
Brazilian sociologist Luiz Alberto de Vianna Moniz Bandeira
for example has denounced the impeachment of Dilma Rousseff in 2016 as a
process driven by strong US interests that sought to reinforce its hegemony
before negotiating the construction of two naval bases in Argentina. Wall Street funds arrived swiftly in the country to secure the success of the
impeachment according to him.
Meanwhile, Sergio Moro, the judge who led the investigation and who
incarcerated Lula da Silva has strong links to the US.
The causes of this democratic decline that Brazil and the entire world are suffering are multiple, however, the solution that de Sousa Santos proposes is this: a union of left-wing forces that protect human rights and state intervention in the economy
He completed a program
on combating international corruption at Harvard, and since then, has travelled
frequently to the US. Now, judge Moro has been named Bolsonaro’s justice minister, while many see in this a grant for his "previous services", naimly the jailing of Lula da Silva.
While the causes of this democratic decline that Brazil and the
entire world are suffering are multiple and diverse, the solution that de Sousa
Santos proposes is simple and straight forward: a union of left-wing forces that protect human rights
and state intervention in the economy, with the intention of counteracting the
most dehumanising effects of neoliberalism.
However ,beyond the Left's secuklar traducion of disunion and internal fights, in a multiparty system as diverse as that of Brazil
(there are currently more than 30 different parties in the House of
Representatives), and where the Left is highly divided between those who
favour the hegemony of the PT and those who demand a change, a united force
of the left is, to say the least, unlikely.
Ultimately, a Left that has
been caught up in discussions over its multiple identities is vulnerable up against a right that knows how to successfully define itself by
what it is not: communist.
The dilemma of socialism or barbarism that De Sousa Santos
has posed is probably exaggerated and dichotomist, with undertones of anti-US
imperialism that appears somewhat contrasting to the current isolationist trend
promoted by Trump. it seems to forget that savage and colonializing capitalism today is also dealt by
Chinese and Russian hands, equally felt by Latin America today.
Boaventura could not be more right in one thing: that this state of
dangerous democratic decline that is currently tearing through Brazil, can only
be combated through constructive self-criticism and a union of left wing forces
that can overcome the hegemony of the PT.
This has to come together with the recognition that
history did not end with the Cold War as Fukuyama suggested, but instead it is more
alive than ever, at the very least under the lens of the "southern epistemologies" so dare to Boaventura de Sousa Santos.