July 19, 2017
Brazil sank deeper into a
political crisis last week as the Senate approved legislation gutting
protections for workers and a court convicted former Workers Party (PT)
President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva on trumped-up corruption charges, most
likely barring his candidacy in the 2018 presidential election.
Both developments signal that
right-wing President Michel Temer--installed in the wake of former PT President
Dilma Rousseff's impeachment last August--and the conservative majorities in
both houses of Brazil's Congress feel they have weathered a series of enormous
protests in recent months and can now go on the attack.
On April 28, the
first general strike in decades in Brazil brought the country to a virtual
halt as millions walked off their jobs, blockaded roads and occupied public
spaces. Subsequent confrontational protests in Brasília, the nation's capital,
pointed to the government's vulnerability and spurred on calls for a second
general strike on June 30. However, rather than throwing their weight into the
fight to bring down Temer under the banner of "Direct elections now!"
much of the PT-aligned trade union and social movement leadership hesitated,
and the strike--despite powerful displays in some cities--fizzled.
Lula's conviction (pending
appeals) and Rousseff's impeachment both stem from anti-corruption
investigations dubbed Car Wash, or Lava Jato, headed by Judge Sergio Moro, who
enjoys special prosecutor-type powers in the Brazilian system. Lava Jato was
launched in 2014 in the wake of mass street protests in the summer of 2013 that
coincided with international soccer's FIFA Confederations Cup hosted by Brazil.
Although the protests were generally left wing, opposing austerity, high
transportation prices and housing shortages, right-wing forces also
participated in the protests, highlighting middle-class opposition to Rousseff
and the PT with a special focus on corruption.
Moro initially posed as an
impartial civil servant targeting all parties, but it soon became clear that he
paid lip service to rooting out corruption on the right. Instead, the right
took up "anti-corruption" as a cover to bring an end to the PT's
14-year hold over the presidency. In the end, Rousseff was impeached over what
amounted to accounting gimmicks to make her proposed national budget look
better than it was.
With the PT out of power, Moro
turned his attention to destroying Lula, who remained immensely popular, by
trying to prove that the ex-president had personally enriched himself. In the
end, while Lula certainly did much better for himself than the majority of his
working-class supporters, the prosecution's case rested on flimsy evidence
centering around Lula's alleged ownership of a luxury apartment valued at
$691,000. By way of comparison, Eduardo Cunha, ex-president of the Chamber of
Deputies of Brazil and a conservative leader in the campaign to unseat
Rousseff, was charged with taking $40 million in bribes.
Yet even if prosecutors did
not convincingly prove that Lula enriched himself through illegal means, there
is overwhelming evidence that the PT participated in the longstanding practice
by Brazil's traditional political parties of funneling enormous sums of money
from private corporations into campaign coffers. The PT may have joined the
game, but the Democrats (the official party under the military dictatorship),
the neoliberal Brazilian Social Democracy Party, and Temer's conservative
Brazilian Democratic Movement Party invented it.
The scale of the attacks by
the right--and the PT's inability to pose itself as a clean and credible
alternative--has opened an enormous debate on the Brazilian left: stick with
the PT and attempt to reform it, or attempt to build a new political project.
The commentary below is by Valério Arcary, a long-time leader in Brazil's
revolutionary socialist movement and member of the coordinating body of the
Movement for an Independent and Socialist Alternative (Movimiento por una
Alternativa Independiente y Socialista, or MAIS). It first appeared at Esquerda
Online and was translated by Lance Selfa. --Todd Chretien
THIS WEEK was sad. The
anti-labor reform bill passed, Judge Moro sentenced Lula, and the Constitution
and Justice Committee sided with Temer--one after the other. I was dismayed
that only a few hundred people came to Avenida Paulista to protest Lula's
sentence. Very few. The only relief was in reading the
beautiful writings of Guilherme Boulos, coordinator of the Homeless Workers
Movement (Movimento dos Trabalhadores Sem Teto), denouncing the travesty.
But it's necessary to state
things as they are. A disgraceful political ruling convicted Lula, and the
popular response was, at least so far, resigned. A left that wants to have a
future has to have principles. Sectarianism can't be its guide.
After all that has happened
since 2003, Lula shouldn't get much sympathy. But those who don't defend Lula,
at least in relation to the courts and Moro, are without question on the side
of the Lava Jato scandalmongers. This ruling was political. Moro didn't even
come up with a technicality to hide behind. He didn't even prove that Lula
owned the apartment in Guarujá. The burden of proof is on the justice system:
the Public Minister had the responsibility to produce evidence. The accused
have the benefit of the doubt.
Staying silent in the face of
Lula's conviction means buckling to pressure from the camp of the ruling class.
And not just any camp. It's the camp that is the majority today, the one that
supports Lava Jato.
Defending Lula's political
rights is not the same as defending him politically. It's simple and
obvious--to anyone who can think clearly--that we can criticize the record of
the PT governments and also note that the court produced no proof that the apartment
belonged to Lula. It doesn't even matter if we think that Lula is, a priori,
innocent of the accusations of corruption. It means defending his democratic
rights, because they are democratic rights for all and, therefore, should be
inviolable.
Opposing Moro and the abuses
of the Lava Jato scandal isn't the same as defending Lula. Lula isn't innocent,
but we aren't joining with the bourgeoisie's executioners who want to destroy
him while stripping him of his democratic rights. The attack on Lula is following
an undeniable strategy: stopping his run for the presidency in 2018.
As if the decision hardly
mattered, Lula still stated that he had faith in the justice system. That is,
at the same time that Moro convicts him as a "thief," Lula reaffirms
his faith in government institutions, reiterates his program of class
collaboration with the bourgeoisie, and refuses to call the working class--that
still counts on his leadership--into the streets to defeat Temer.
Therefore, the unavoidable
conclusion is that the ruling class broke with Lula, not the other way around.
It's probably unlikely that he will be a candidate for president in 2018. If he
ends up being able to run, which seems far-fetched today, we shouldn't support
him.
But I think that everyone who
wants to build a left beyond "Lulaism" should defend the PT's right
to nominate Lula in 2018. This whole operation was designed to prevent Lula's
candidacy. The court in Porto Alegre can't back down.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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THEY'RE PAYING for strategic
errors. For years, the PT "beat the drum," boasting of its tactical
victories in winning four successive presidential elections. All of these
tactics produced a strategic defeat, possibly irreversible, for the PT, and can
have serious consequences for all of the left. That's because Lula is being
convicted for corruption, not for having surrendered to big business. Although
division and confusion still reign, an important section of the working class
is concluding that Lula's conviction is legitimate. They didn't take to the
streets to defend him. That's terrible, but that's the way it is.
They're paying for strategic
errors. If someone on the left thinks that it's "progressive" that
Lula was sentenced for lying, they've understood nothing about what's happened
since June 2013, and especially since the impeachment of Dilma Rousseff. For 14
years, the PT leadership supported, unconditionally, Lula's policy of
negotiation/surrender: to pacify Brazilian capitalism by showing that the left
"in power" didn't represent any danger to their businesses.
They're paying for strategic
errors. Those of us who warned that the PT's orientation was laying the
foundation for defeat remained a small minority for 15 years. As these bitter
events unfold before our eyes, it's now clear that Lula and the PT leadership
were wrong. Lula and the PT are paying an enormous price for the strategy of
compromising with capitalism.
Class collaboration was always
presented as the lesser evil. Now, the bill has come due. The tactic of broad alliances
with sections of big business to govern "for everyone" was supposed
to be painless. Only it isn't. "Win, win"--the policy of economic
growth underpinned by unprecedented increases in commodity prices--was supposed
to sustain reforms, such as boosting the minimum wage above the rate of
inflation, without cutting into profit rates. It failed. The limits imposed by
contemporary capitalism were stronger.
They're paying for strategic
errors. The illusion that the justice system is neutral is an ideological trap.
Neither prosecutors nor judges are impartial technocrats. Neither are they
"above" social and political conflict. They exist to provide a means
to resolve disputes without resorting to weapons.
Lula's conviction without
overwhelming proof is an attack on democratic rights. It is designed to
undermine his leadership. Lula shouldn't be seen as innocent. He knew perfectly
well how the PT financed itself. But those who claim to be on the left, but who
don't oppose Moro's decision, are staining their reputations.
The PT and Lula didn't do
anything new: they bowed down to money from construction companies and banks,
as did the PSDB, DEM and a long list of others. Allying with enemies of the
working class under the pretext of a "struggle against corruption" is
unforgivable shortsightedness. It's more than necessary for the Left Socialist
Front to challenge the PT with an anti-capitalist platform. But it will not
build support by jumping on the bandwagon of the reactionary campaign against
Lula.
They're paying for strategic
errors. Insisting on the same strategy, even with different leaders, will have
no other outcome except more defeats.
First published at Esquerda
Online. Translated by Lance Selfa.
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