Brazil Flashcards

1
Q

(article) How can an undeniably authoritarian ruler who was widely said to threaten democracy can simultaneously seem like a powerless buffoon?

A

against the odds and expectations democracy has been resilient

electing a pm/president with autocratic tendencies heigthens the risk of backsliding, but should not be taken as evidence of backsliding

  • “the combination of a politically weak president, and an environment with strong checks and balances, facilitates democratic survival even under populist administrations”
  1. constitutional design
    -> strong independent judicial system
  2. institutional change since enactment 1988 constitution
  3. nature of plebiscitarian leadership typical of populism
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2
Q

(article) Brazil as near miss? or case of quick recovery

A

near misses = cases where demoracy is exposed to social political or eco forces taht could catalyse backsliding, yet somehow overcome those forces and regains its footing

  • i.e. cases where democracy has been under severe threat but survived intact

cases of quick recovery = case when a minimum threshold of democratic quality into nascent competitive authoritarianism is not met

Brazil is not really either: never felt below thresholds

we characterize Brazil as a case of quick recovery with two important caveats: Brazil would never fall below a threshold of competitive authoritarianism + threat posed by Bolsonaro was real but not entirely credible in the light of Brazil’s political institutions and political dynamics

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3
Q

(article) about Bolsonaro

A

victory more bc problem in supply than in demand: main parties had corruption scandals + core authoritarian bolsonaristas are relatively small

governing without forming a coalition failed (60 impeachment requests)
Mismanagement pandemic + accusations illicit activities son -> second year looked diff: built coalition with Centrao, but bargaining power was mainly of the Centrao, not Bolsonaro

even with coalition with centrao he did not have a majority (204/513) => lowest % executive bills approved by congress among all Brazil presidents = Congress worked as veto point to block Bolsonaro’s illiberal agenda

Bolsonaro = highest nr of executive orders (take immediate effect after publication) = typical for presidents trying to bypass legislature

  • were mainly due to emergency conditions pandemic
  • tend to be limited to administrative issues

Bolsonaro in a pickle: forced to walk on the razor’s edge; couldn’t moderate (risks electoral support) + couldn’t be too confrontational/anti-system (would be isolated)

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4
Q

(article) boiling frog argument

A

= metaphor for the opposition’s inability to coordinate against backsliding

downplays the role of forces that countervail backsliding:
In Brazil

  • high magnitude districts -> high party fragmentation -> president forced to bargain
  • strengthened legislative branch (parties more autonomous vs executive)
  • multiple veto points: powerful state governors countervail presidential power
  • Supreme Court powerful check on the executive

-> Bolsonaro no presidential hegemony (ability to exercise political control over other institutions)

in practice = the frog jumped out of the boiling water

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5
Q

the case / democratization

A

1889 = end of empire, no major increase in democracy then: oligarchic republic (only small percentage could vote)

1930-1940s = Estada Novo of Vargas = authoritarian with some social democratic hints

1945 -> republic with general suffrage

high democracy rating, but not as high as older democracies

similar with authoritarian regimes = how politicians connect to voters with clientelism

Brazil copied much of the US system

robust federalism = much power at the subnational level (historical origins: states/regions powerful in colonial time)

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6
Q

culture and nation

A

population most dense on the east coast

  • north east used to be the economic heart (sugar plantations)
  • now south east (Sao Paulo) center of wealth

large BRIC country

large -> diversity
lot of people identify as mixed, much of the indigenous population was repressed or died from decease
diversity -> federal structure to accomodate regional areas

not much external aggression: little struggles over borders after decolonization (during they were protected by Portugal)

north east used to be economic heart, now it is the south east (Sao Paulo)

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7
Q

horizontal inequality Brazil

A

white groups are in the majority in the richer south.

mixed identity mostly found in the north east

indigenous pushed back near the Amazon area = poorest area

-> dividing lines of regional wealth that overlap with ethnic identity

(but it is not a big cleavage)

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8
Q

historical development
pre-independence

A

pre-colonial = many diff populations eastern side (most fertile), were pushed back by Portuguese colonizers, it became an exploitation colony

for a long time not much interest in independence: not that many settlers, weren’t sure if they could control everything

  • 1550-1830 = sugar cultivation, slave trade
  • gradually replaced by minerals -> shift in economic center to the south east

1807 = Napoleon invades Portugal -> king flees to Brazil + places sun as king
-> 1815 foundation of the Kingdom of Brazil

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9
Q

historical dev. independence and empire

A

1822: Pedro 1 declares independence -> 1824 authoritarian constitution

tensions between emperors (want abolition) and plantation holders -> 1888 abolition of slavery
(after learning from civil war in US: afraid that continuing would lead to civil war)

1889 coup -> Pedro 2 into exile -> first republic until 1930

first republic = constitution after the US constitution, but oligarchic system (only small % could vote)

  • divergense interest diff oligarchs: some want more protectionism agriculture, others have more industrial free trade interests
  • Great depression -> loss popularity gov (urban poor loses jobs) -> military coup

1930-1945 = Estada Novo by Vargas = authoritarian leftist regime with some social welfare policies (-> support urban poor in the great depression),
!estada novo is in the model of Portugal?

  • 1945 military disposes Vargas -> second republic

second republic 1945-64 = Vargas legitimately returns to power, still only small % can vote + highly polarized pro-Vargas vs pro-republic

  • 1964 military coup supported by the US

Military decides to keep the power -> eco growth BUT by the 80s decline eco growth
- reading: torture, disappearances, exile

1980s = abertura = gradual/controlled transition to democracy
(eventually military regime lost control; people wanted to go faster and faster)

1988 = new constitution

1989-1992 Collor de Mello president = corruption scandals (resigned befre he could be impeached)

-> referendum if the people wanted a presidential or parliamentary system or a monarchical system -> republic with president

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10
Q

authoritarian developmentalism

A

long time discussion/consensus that democracies develop better than authoritarian regimes

BUT

70s and 80s: East Asian Tigers and Brazil major economic growth

-> idea that maybe authoritarian regimes lead to development bc they have more control/stability

  • confidence producers
  • no instability by switching power etc.

BUT: 1980s sharp decreases eco growth Brazil

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11
Q

cleavages - rural/urban

A

in the beginning = agriculture vs industrialization

now not that much: agriculture has become more lucrative -> same interests as industry: no protectionism

  • diff in e.g. France were agriculture benefits from protectionism, but industry not

recently: agriculture more towards right-wing parties (Bolsonaro) bc they offer land in the Amazon basin

  • Bancada Ruralista = group of parties for agricultural interests

it is def a cleavage and needs to be present in parliament

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12
Q

cleavages: class/economic

A

poor vs rich

  • workers party Lula = broader than just the workers, it is labour but also agriculture
    -> Bolsa Familia = support for poor families (regardless if they are labor or not)

high inequality (GINI) -> tensions

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13
Q

regional cleavages

A

= STRONGEST IN BRAZILIAN POLITICS

overlaps with the economic cleavage (=> horizontal inequality)

tensions federal gov and states (like in the US)

strong regional identifications and decentralized federalism, but national parties

not really a center-periphery cleavage: no calls for autonomy, federalism seems to be sufficient to appease diff regional interests (like in Germany and the US)

  • there was an (the South is my country) independence movement in the south, 90% agreed, but no one showed up
  • political entepreneurs have tried to make the issue salient, but this has not worked

issue is not really salient: they won’t vote for independence, they don’t vote along the lines of regions

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14
Q

ethnicity cleavage

A

overlaps with regional and economic cleavage (=> horizontal inequality)

not much tensions: little polarization across ethnic lines

  • large mixed group
  • fluid identity categories (you can pick which one you identify with)

political entrepreneurs: it just doesn’t work: it does not seem to resonate (even if there is discrimination)
- exception = some movements for indigeneous rights

recent years: affirmative action policies (quota policies) = controversial -> increase cleavage + polarization (white majority feels marginalized -> votes for Bolsonaro)

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15
Q

affirmative action policies

A

= quota policies
= direct policies intended to alliviate inequalities between ethnic groups

directly targets specific minority groups (e.g. make it easier for African Americans to join top universities)

it is effective, but also brings tensions, can increase polarization:

  • gives people advantages on basis of identity
  • = controversial: people are being marginalized in their own country (transnational cleavage + nativism)

better: you want people to have one identity, not to put emphasis on multiple identities (this leads to resentment) -> indirect measures are better: you help all the poor people

  • this helps the minority, but not directly -> leads to less resentment
  • everyone is treated equally

thing is: this works slower

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16
Q

cleavages: religion

A

not very important: 90% christian, 70% catholic

church has a more progressive role in Latin America than in Europe: more associated with democracy,, christian values of the welfare state

  • still conservative with e.g. abortion and womens rights

similar to the US: we see a rise in conservative christian movements

17
Q

presidential system

A

analogies with US presidentialism =

  1. separation of powers
  2. directly elected president
  3. directly elected bicameral parliament
  4. independent judiciary (in the past did not have a big role, but since Bolsonaro it came back, now e.g. banned twitter)
  5. strongly decentralized federation
    (protection of states)
  6. veto powers

differences:

  1. additional constitutional checks
    (some parts of the constitution can’t be changed: can’t abolish federalism, military power is curtailed, strong protection of individual rights)
    (in the US only equal suffrage of the states in the Senate is unchangeable)
  2. electoral systems:
    - president = two-round
    - parliament = open-list PR (-> power to individuals rather than parties)
18
Q

the president
7

A
  • directly elected (with VP)
  • 4y term
  • maximum 2 CONSECUTIVE terms
    *you can return
  • appoints cabinet
  • initiates legislation (80%)
  • veto-powers (but can be overturned by simple majority)
    *overturn used to be seen as weakness, post-Bolsonaro seen as a blessing to protect against strong presidents
  • emergency decrees, but limited (tend to be about administrative issues)
19
Q

impeachment procedure president

A

Chamber of deputy can initiate it with 1/3 in favor

  • Chamber of deputy vote 2/3 majority
  • senate vote 2/3 majority

1992: Collor resigns before impeachment

2016 Rousseff successfully impeached

20
Q

presidential elections

A

two-round system
- like in France and Russia

simultaneously with parliamentary elections

need for political alliances -> coalitional presidentialism

  • you need support from political players across regions
  • after first round alliance building to get their voters to vote for you -> cuid pro quo = they get ministerial positions or bribes, you get their voters

run-off (two largest candidates) three weeks after first round

2022 = Lula vs Bolsonaro
narrow win Lula, most support in the north (that’s where the poverty is)

21
Q

bicameral legislature

A

chamber of deputies
= proportional, diff states have diff nr of seats depending on population size

  • 513 members
  • 4y terms
  • less powers for parties in choosing who will represent them bc open list PR

congress elections:

  • vote for candidate, not party
  • voting is compulsory (they register who vote, when you don’t you e.g. can’t collect pensions)
  • no electoral threshold (-> fragmentation)

federal senate

  • 81 members, 8y terms (3 senators from each state)
  • SMD/FPTP (like in the US senate)
  • staggered elections: 1/3 one time, 2/3 next time

!!senate and house are equal: everything that is approved by the senate must also be approved by the house = robust federalism

22
Q

consequences congress electoral system

A
  1. extreme fragmentation (president <20% seats parliament)
    -> president relies on other parties for support -> pork-barrel politics
  2. weak party discipline
  3. regional identity trumps party
  4. recurrent splitting, switching
  5. pork-barrel politics & clientelism
    - gov officials allocate funds/projects to secure support
23
Q

coalitional presidentialism

A

presidents never have parliamentary majority (as in US)

depend on broad coalition of parties in parliament

  • advocates: need for bigger coalitions, consensual politics, stability
  • practice: presidents have to allocate resources to supporting parties

effects:

  1. creates interest group dominance, corruption, bad governance?
  2. protects against strong presidentialism

*similar to cohabitation and US (usually in second 2y only)

24
Q

judiciary

A

Supreme federal court

  • 11 justices, max 30y term (mandatory retirement at 75)
  • increasingly active e.g. in covid: led states take their own measures when Bolsonaro didn’t do shit
    now e.g. going after X (fake news + hate messages)
25
Q

federalism

A

=symmetric (like US and Germany)
- not like Russia which is asymmetric

= robust

but: no clear divisions of tasks (still not much conflict)

26 states and 1 federal district with elected governors and legislatures

dominance of regions today bc colonial history: regents couldn’t control them
- history of rich elites controlling regions, could not be controlled in any time

26
Q

gubernational coattails (see also Nigeria)

A

You get elected as a parliametnarian more or less bc you get elected in a popular party
= not the case in Brazil: if you choose the list of the regional government, you are elected on the
= rewatch don’t get it
Parliament gets controlled by governors
= tells us something aboutt he regional power in brazil vs the national power
-> we will aslo see it in Nigeria: governors control parliamentarians at the federal level -> makes sure that the federal level doesn’t do anything against them

27
Q

political parties - PT

A

party of Lula, Rousseff

founded in 1980 = protest movement against regime

workers and poor, intellectuals, left-wing Catholics

since in power = ideological moderation

ideology

  1. social democracy
  2. decreasing inequality
  3. agrarian reform (not land redistribution, but some form of reform to keep it out of the hands of a few)
  4. participatory democracy

Bolsa familia - controversial, for the rest the party is more moderate

28
Q

political parties: center

A

many parties can be seen as centrists, are ideologically weak + based on clientelistic networks

29
Q

political parties - right and far right

A

Bolsonaro often switched parties

liberal party since 2016 more far right-turn, started more moderate loiberal

UB largest party in power today?

30
Q

ideology or mass clientelism?

A

there is some ideology, but a lot of mix in the middle + much mass clientelism
*more than in Russia where it is more coercive than vote buying

interesting: vote is secret, how does vote buying succeed?

  1. poverty and inequality: people buy votes of people that have seen nothing happen for them by the government, haven’t seen improvement. If politicians buy votes (give money, food, medicine etc.) there -> at least this is one politician that actually did something for me, so why not vote for this person
  2. More collective explanation: public campaigns with vote buying: people see poltitiicann being generous -> creates expectation they will also be generous when in parliament -> maybe we will all benefit if we vote for them

1984 law prohibits vote buying, this is being implemented (if you’re caught vote buying you get prosecuted)
BUT: clientelism bites back

  • relational clientelism = if you vote for me, i can help you out when i am in parliament (more long-term rather than direct benefits)
    = post-election benefit from politician
  • problematic policies: lists who get help with e.g. natural disasters etc. -> you go to the office to apply, if something happens people find out that you are not actually on the list -> only people that voted on the right candidate make it on the list
31
Q

is Bolsa Familia clientelistic?

A

Scholars: not much evidence it is :
With registering theres not much political manipulation

bUT: it can create a lot of public support (is a universal policy, also in established democracy)

Was canceled at some point bc criticism from the far right,just before elections Lula created auxili brasil (now also abolished, will be replaced by new bolsa familia)

  • Interestingly: the cards are given to the women, not the men = idea that the money will actually go to the kids
32
Q

elite clientelism

A
  • numerous large-scale corruption scandals at the elite level
  • resources need for mass clientelism
  • but also self-enrichment
  • quid pro quo’s of coalitional presidentialism

most famous instance of corruption = Operacao Lava Jato
= public procurement bribery and contract inflation

33
Q

is corruption a legacy of authoritarianism?

A

NO: US never was an authoritarian regime, had similar prooblems with corruption in parliament (seats sold to private interests)

it may just be a feature of weak democracy, not authoritarian regimes

34
Q

perfect storm for Bolsonaro presidency

A
  1. economic declie
  2. inflation
  3. corruption scandals: car wash money laundering in which many high level gov officials were implicated
  4. high criminality and homicide

+ former president Lula was banned from running in 2018 by the superior electoral court -> less charismatic Haddad as candidate

Lula = drop approval ratings
Rousseff impeached -> more drop
lowest approval rating = Temer

Bolsonaro -> rise support, massive polarization also led to some decline in support

35
Q

Bolsonaro

A

= against corruption, against elites, against system (like Trump and Orban) - also:

  • xenophobic
  • homophobic
  • ultranationalist
  • supportive of former military regime

one month before elections he got stabbed during a rally -> maybe benefitted his victory
- similar consequences may follow with Trump now

in the elections got support from the south east = more wealthy part
= won

Bolsonaro = populist, but also some corrupt tendencies (also son accused of corruption)

attacks on civil liberties + open questioning of democracy & coup threats (constantly wanting to get on with the military hoping they would support a coup)

accusations of electoral manipulation points to decline in democracy

36
Q

Bolsonaro - party fragmentation benefit?

A

coalitional presidentialism -> Bolsonaro needs to build coalition to push policies forward
-> Bolsonaro couldn’t get much done = gridlock

fragmentalized party helped democracy survive (usually it is seen as a weakness of democracy)

power centralization is not as strong as in other countries

  • e.g. Hungary: people in Orban’s party owe their position to him, vote on his behalf
  • e.g. US: Trump + Tea party made the party less moderate + other members start to vote in his behalf

Bolsonaro: candidates in the parliament are not alligned to the presdient as much, more about governors

37
Q

main institutions that protected democracy from Bolsonaro

A
  1. military (refused to back up coup: january 2023 congress attack)
  2. weakness of parliament (fragmetnation -> gridlock)
  3. constitutional court: states in their right to implement their own measures to protect the population
    (Failed attempt to meddle with the federal police: he appointed his personal security chief Ramagem as head of the federal police ->Justice Minister Moro announced resignation + accused Bolsonaro of political interference -> Supreme Court nullified the appointment of Ramagem)

-> 2022 Bolsonaro narrow loss

Lula won, but still polarized, Bolsonaro has the biggest party in parliament

38
Q

discussion on V-dem

A

V-dem 2010-2020 negative image of democracy; democracy in decline

  • V-dem is based on expert opinions, it is subjective
  • Little and Meng 2023: negative spiral: people are subjectively rating countries worse than they actually are

criticism: declining V-dem scores for democracies as Brazil and the US

Little and Meng: need to look at objective measures (e.g. competitiveness elections)

  • competitiveness 2010-2020: elections still very much competitive
  • objective measures 2010-2020 = democracy not in decline, maybe even rise

problem objective measures: if you only look at them you don’t get anywhere: you could call China democratic

-> does discourse count?

power centralization Bolsonaro was not that bad, this goes against V-dem
but some argue that subjective also counts: declining norm of democracy, that we are even talking about possible military coups, electoral fraud

IMPORTANT: difference between objective and subjective measures of democracy and democratic decline