Caso não consiga ver esta newsletter, clique aqui

If you can't see this newsletter, click here

Si no puede ver este boletín, haga clic aquí

Sumaúma: Journalism from Center of the World
Elections 2024
Thursday, 03 October, 2024
Elections: The dilemma of the left in a collapsing world
Responsible politicians should warn voters that life is going to get worse—but who’s going to vote for the truth?

Eliane Brum
Altamira, Xingu River, Amazon


On October 6, Brazilians will go to the polls to elect mayors and city council members in 5,568 municipalities across the country, although not a single campaign has even touched on the most important issue. Or do any of you remember a relevant, serious debate that has addressed global heating and the extinction of biodiversity? If there was one, it didn’t make the news. But the collapse of our planet has a major impact on politics and is directly related to the rise of the far right around the world—and also in Brazil. The question is: What do political parties and politicians have to offer as the Earth heats up, droughts and floods multiply, extreme weather events grow more common and more serious, and scientists are warning we have entered uncharted territory?

Apparently, if we are to take Brazil’s largest, financially richest city as the model, the answer is verbal assaults, baseless accusations, lies, and outright physical aggression. São Paulo ranks as the world’s most polluted metropolis, 60% of Brazilian territory has recently been shrouded in smoke from forest fires (most the result of arson), people have gone back to wearing masks to protect themselves from contaminated air—and none of this has been discussed by any candidate, from north to south. The debasement of politics is inevitable when politicians and voters, faced with the risk of extinction, talk about everything but the fact that their world is collapsing and that every action taken by every mayor and every decision by every city council should be approached with this reality in mind if it is to have a real, positive impact.

In cities like São Paulo—home to a significant portion of destroyers of the Amazon and the financial instruments at their service—what should be at the heart of political campaigns are issues such as water management, the protection of springs and the vegetation around surviving rivers, water and air pollution abatement, better mass transit (replacing fossil fuel cars and shifting to greener models ASAP), a master plan compatible with life rather than with accelerating destruction, a stronger healthcare system, which takes into account the prospect of proliferating viruses and bacteria—all against the backdrop of a robust plan of actions to mitigate and adapt to a changing climate and mutating landscape.

Municipalities in the state of Pará wield the enormous power to authorize mining in their territories. So Governor Helder Barbalho (Brazilian Democratic Movement) gives “green” speeches all over, posing as a sustainability leader while washing his hands inside his own state, letting the mayors there do as they please and thus securing their support. All across the Amazon, forest destroyers are polling out front. Not because they’re fooling voters but because destroying Nature garners votes.

São Paulo and Amazonian states like Pará are connected. We must see the links and ramifications—which pass through Brasilia, as we show in this issue.

In these elections, most candidates have opted yet again for denialism. Nearly every campaign has been denialist. One question we might ask: How much does this have to do with voter denialism?

In its worldwide advance, the far right is largely a consequence of the insecurity produced by a changing world; it thrives on uncertainty and despair. If everything is collapsing around you and the ground gives way—ever more often quite literally—you’ll demand guarantees and rescue. Lacking the emotional resources to cope with risks most people can’t even begin to fathom, many people who feel they are losing their place in life—no matter how precarious it might already be—turn violent.

But what about the left, what do they have to say to the voters?

The left is at a crossroads. There is the old left, with Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva as its representative in Brazil, who still believes the only thing people care about is having a car in their garage, enjoying a barbecue and beer on the weekends, and buying their own home, filled with the latest appliances. And as long as this is guaranteed, life will go on. Lula and much of the Workers’ Party have missed the acceleration of the climate collapse in recent years, as well as important changes in what new generations want and need.

But what do leftists who understand the gravity of the moment have to offer?

The most honest politicians must tell their voters that just voting isn’t enough. In addition to voting much more wisely, in order to remove active or passive denialists from positions of power, voters must participate more actively in decisions. They must put pressure on lawmakers and local government leaders on a daily basis, demanding new projects and emergency mitigation and adaptation measures but also demanding that the huge corporations currently consuming Nature be stopped. They must push both for the definitive burial of the legal thesis that nullifies any Indigenous claims to land not physically occupied on October 5, 1988, and for the immediate demarcation of all Indigenous territories, complying with the Constitution after a decades-long wait.

These politicians must also say we have to take much greater responsibility for choices made in the present, because these decisions will determine not only voters’ lives but the lives of their children and grandchildren, and not a century from now but next year.

Between lies that offer the comfort of hope and truths that demand sacrifice and loss, who is going to vote for the politician who tells the truth? The answer must be “us.” We must vote for those who tell the hard truth but are willing to fight. This is the beginning of a change that needs to happen very quickly, because the planet’s landscape is changing rapidly.

The votes we cast at the highly reliable electronic urns on October 6 will define four crucial years of our lives. We don’t have another four years to wait.
Read more
Playing with fire: The burning passion between politicians and agribusiness lobbyists
The Pensar Agropecuária Institute is a campaigning machine financed by industry trade groups who influence legislators to destroy protections for nature
Rafael Moro Martins, Brasília
Far-right election rivals vie for power in ‘agro-suicide’ centre of Sinop

Amid drought-dust and fire-smoke, the municipal campaign in this dictatorship-created city only has two candidates, and both are connected to anti-democratic, pro-Bolsonaro groups

Ana Magalhães (text) and Diego Baravelli (photos), Sinop, Mato Grosso
Novo Progresso: the worst of the worst for Amazon deforestation

In the town that led Brazil’s infamous Fire Day, land thieves flex their muscles and set the tone for the next elections, pressuring Congress, the Judiciary, and the Lula administration to sever and privatize a chunk of Jamanxim National Forest twice the area of São Paulo city

Rafael Moro Martins, Novo Progresso, Pará, Amazon
Child abuse claims weaponised in Marajó election
One of the poorest and most remote regions of the Brazilian Amazon has become a laboratory for fake news as opposition groups peddle lies to win votes in the archipelago
Bruno Abbud (text) and Gabriela Portilho (photos), Ilha do Marajó, Pará
The reinvented life of the man who confessed to killing Chico Mendes

In Medicilândia, Darci Alves Pereira adopted a new name, got rich, started an Evangelical church, and tried to enter politics through Jair Bolsonaro’s party

Bruno Abbud (text) and Christian Braga (photos), Medicilândia, Transamazônica, Pará
Stop voting for politicians who are killing you

Either we halt destruction or we’ll see a lot more blood, pain, death, and maybe extinction

Eliane Brum Altamira, Xingu River, Amazon
In 2024, life itself is up for vote

The killers of the forest and its defenders want more political power. Unless the former can be stopped at the upcoming municipal elections, it won’t be just the Amazon that suffers

Talita Bedinelli
‘Super-election year’ highlights climate threat to democracy

Worldwide, more people will vote this year than ever before, but instead of a cause of celebration, this is a source of worry because extreme politics are thriving in an era of extreme weather

Jonathan Watts Altamira, Xingu River, Amazon
Lessons for Democracy From the Brazilian Amazon

‘The environment and its natural resources are at the heart of the discussion on the maintenance of democracy,’ said Hugo Loss, an official in Brazil’s environmental protection agency and a former target of surveillance by the Bolsonaro administration

Marcos Colón (Amazônia Latitude) and Katie Surma (Inside Climate News)

Clique aqui para cancelar a assinatura