Latin America

AMLO and Bolsonaro feel the limits of personalized politics

“There’s plenty of competition, but the most ineffective world leader responding to coronavirus right now goes to Brazil President [Jair] Bolsonaro. This weekend he’s blasting governors taking lockdown measures. Will seriously damage his mandate,” tweeted on Monday Ian Bremmer, president and founder of the Eurasia Group, a political risk research and consulting firm.

Mr. Bremmer is probably right. Mr. Bolsonaro over the last few days has actively dismissed the dangers of the Covid-19 outbreak, endorsed anti-democrat street protests against lawmakers and Supreme Court justices (greeting and touching supporters — directly exposing as many as 300 to the virus — despite 22 members of his entourage on a recent trip to the U.S. testing positive for the virus), and has undermined the actions of his Health Ministry — donating protection masks and respirators to Italy while local hospitals report a lack of equipment. And according to a report, he even “didn’t read or ignored” a January intelligence memo alerting him to the potential risks of a pandemic.

However, the Brazilian leader perhaps has a rival for this vaunted title: left-wing Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, also known as AMLO.

Despite many differences of beliefs and policy proposals, AMLO and Mr. Bolsonaro have demonstrated striking similarities in their responses...

Lucas Berti

Lucas Berti covers international affairs — specialized in Latin American politics and markets. He has been published by Opera Mundi, Revista VIP, and The Intercept Brasil, among others.

Recent Posts

Porto Alegre, in South Brazil, braced as river levels continue to rise

"I insist, it's not time to go back home. It's not the time to be…

1 hour ago

Scoop: Financial crisis mars the biggest power provider in the Amazon

Amazonas Energia, a power distributor that supplies electricity to roughly 1 million people across the…

2 hours ago

Brazil, Britain, and the slave trade

In its inaugural meeting, "The Brazilian Report's To Be Read" book club will talk to…

23 hours ago

Market Roundup: Businesses’ default level stabilizes. What does it mean?

This week, the Central Bank stepped the brakes of monetary easing by opting for a…

2 days ago

Virtually all Brazilians link current floods to climate change

Additionally, a whopping 96 percent of Brazilians believe extreme weather events are becoming more intense

3 days ago

Chile’s far-right wants ‘Texas-like wall’ on Bolivian border

Eyeing the 2025 presidential election, José Antonio Kast promises to tackle a public security crisis…

3 days ago