Latin America This Week: June 26, 2023
from Latin America’s Moment and Latin America Studies Program

Latin America This Week: June 26, 2023

Bolsonaro’s legal troubles begin; Guatemalan presidential candidates Torres and Arévalo head for second round.
Presidential candidate for the Semilla party Bernardo Arévalo speaks with members of his party as he attends a press conference on the day of the first round of Guatemala’s presidential election in Guatemala City, Guatemala, June 25, 2023.
Presidential candidate for the Semilla party Bernardo Arévalo speaks with members of his party as he attends a press conference on the day of the first round of Guatemala’s presidential election in Guatemala City, Guatemala, June 25, 2023. REUTERS/Cristina Chiquin

Bolsonaro’s legal troubles begin. Former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro was in court last week facing the first of some sixteen cases before the Superior Electoral Court. Others will likely follow from investigations into alleged criminal misdeeds including falsifying COVID-19 vaccine records and not declaring over $3 million in jewelry from Saudi Arabia. If convicted this week of abusing his office to cast doubt on Brazil’s electoral system, he will be barred from running for president or any other elected position in Brazil until 2030.

The cases against the former president are just part of the reckoning in the wake of January 8, 2023, when rioters stormed and vandalized the Congress, Supreme Court, and presidential offices on Brasília’s Three Powers Plaza. After investigations, current President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s administration fired many members of Bolsonaro’s inner circle, including his personal aide Col. Mauro Cid and former security official Anderson Torres. The Supreme Court investigated Senator Marcos do Val and temporarily dismissed Brasília governor Ibaneis Rocha, other Bolsonaro allies. Implicated military and police leaders lost out too. More broadly, prosecutors are building cases against rioters themselves, fifty already underway and potentially a thousand more making their way through the court system.

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Many compare Brazil’s January 8 riot to the January 6, 2021, storming of the U.S. Capitol (and draw out the parallels between Bolsonaro and former U.S. President Donald Trump). Brazil’s democratic response and push for accountability over these last six months is perhaps the biggest divergence: Congress, courts, and the executive rallying to defend Brazil’s institutions and democracy.

Guatemalan presidential candidates Torres and Arévalo head for second round. With more than ninety-seven percent of votes reported from yesterday’s election, Guatemalan presidential candidates Sandra Torres and Bernardo Arévalo are headed to an August 20, 2023, runoff. Three-time presidential hopeful Torres edged Arévalo out in the first round, winning 15.8% of the vote compared to his 11.8%, but that was no surprise: Torres commands a sprawling political machine, the National Unity of Hope (UNE) party, with presence across the country.  Arévalo, who hails from a small, centrist anti-corruption party called Seed Movement (Semilla), was the real upset. Arévalo’s surprise popularity—just last week, he was polling in eighth place at less than three percent—shows that despite their persistent efforts, Guatemala’s entrenched political factions were unable to suppress bottom-up demand for an outsider. In the leadup to the elections, Guatemala’s constitutional court blocked several popular candidates from running, a move widely viewed as manipulation of the election before voters even made it to the polls. Many of the twenty-two remaining presidential candidates were considered part of a political establishment that has in recent years narrowed space for opposition and abused government finances. Competition in the runoff should be intense.

As an outsider to Guatemala’s dominant political factions, Arévalo is poised to tap into widespread discontent with defective governance and politics-as-usual. More Guatemalans—nearly one million—cast spoiled votes than voted for either frontrunner. As Arévalo’s profile rises, that could change. But only Torres has a country-wide network of alliances. She is also more likely to placate establishment hardliners among the private sector and ex-military who will seek to block an Arévalo win at all costs. A free and fair runoff is still no guarantee. Meanwhile, whoever wins, he or she will have to deal with a congress dominated by the political machine of incumbent President Alejandro Giammattei, as well as other established factions.

More on:

Latin America

Brazil

Elections and Voting

Guatemala

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