Brazil election: ‘It is over,’ Bolsonaro tells Supreme Court

Brazil election: ‘It is over,’ Bolsonaro tells Supreme Court

Aljazeera 

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro has privately told members of the Supreme Court that the country’s tightly contested election “is over”, according to local media reports, two days after the far-right leader was defeated by Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

Bolsonaro broke nearly 48 hours of public silence on Tuesday afternoon, telling reporters that he would respect Brazil’s constitution but stopping short of conceding or congratulating his left-wing rival.

After a private meeting with Bolsonaro later that day, Supreme Court Justice Luiz Edson Fachin said the former army captain had said: “It is over. So, let’s look ahead.” The justice made the comment in a video broadcast on local media.

Bolsonaro’s silence – both in public statements and on social media – had fuelled concerns he could be seeking to contest the results, especially after he had falsely claimed for months that Brazil’s electronic voting system was vulnerable to fraud.

But in a very brief address on Tuesday from the presidential palace in Brasilia, Bolsonaro said, “As President of the Republic and as a citizen, I will continue to respect all the commandments of our Constitution.”

His chief of staff then took the podium and said Bolsonaro had “authorised” a transition to Lula’s government, which will be sworn in on January 1.

The president-elect won 50.9 percent of the vote compared with Bolsonaro’s 49.1 percent in Sunday’s run-off, which capped what was described as the most divisive presidential election campaign in Brazil’s history.

Lula, who previously served as president from 2003 to 2010, now faces the difficult challenge of uniting a deeply polarised nation.

In his victory speech, Lula pledged to govern for all 215 million Brazilians, not just those who voted for him, and has promised to reverse some of Bolsonaro’s most contentious policies, including on environmental protection in the Amazon rainforest.

“We are telling the world that Brazil is back,” Lula tweeted on Tuesday evening, promising to tackle hunger, inequality, and the climate crisis. “This is the Brazil that we are going to build together. With work, dialogue and democracy.”

While Bolsonaro’s team has acknowledged that a transition would take place, many of his supporters are blocking roads across Brazil in anger over his defeat to Lula.

Crowds of Bolsonaro backers – including Brazilian truckers, a key constituency of the outgoing president – have used burning tyres and vehicles to shut down major routes since polls closed on Sunday, pledging not to accept Lula’s return to the presidency.

The Supreme Court on Tuesday orderedthe Federal Highway Police to disperse the blockades, threatening to impose fines if it did not act quickly.

The force said protesters were blocking highways partially or fully in 156 locations as of Wednesday morning, down from approximately 190 the previous night.

The blockages were reported in 15 Brazilian states, most notably in the Bolsonaro strongholds of Santa Catarina and Mato Grosso.

Although smaller than in previous days, the protests are still likely disrupting fuel distribution, meat production, food deliveries to supermarkets and shipments of grains to ports. Anvisa, the national health agency, warned that the blockades could lead to shortages of medical supplies.

During his speech on Tuesday, Bolsonaro said the protests were the result of “indignation and a sense of injustice” about how the vote was carried out. He said people should avoid destroying property or “impeding the right to come and go”, but did not ask them to stop the blockades.

The post Brazil election: ‘It is over,’ Bolsonaro tells Supreme Court appeared first on Al Jazeera.

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