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https://scmp.com/news/world/americas/article/3198049/brazil-truckers-protest-bolsonaro-loss-da-silva-blocking-roads-president-has-still-not-conceded
World/ Americas

Brazil’s Bolsonaro won’t contest election result, says minister, while Brazil truckers protest loss by blocking roads

  • Bolsonaro has not spoken publicly since official results released
  • Meanwhile, truck drivers have blocked hundreds of roads, angry that the president lost to leftist former president da Silva
Truckers supportive of Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro block a highway on Tuesday to protest against his election loss to former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Photo: AP

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro is set to make an official statement on his election defeat later on Tuesday, a minister said, adding that the far-right leader will not contest the results.

Communications Minister Fabio Faria told Reuters that Bolsonaro was expected to meet with Supreme Court justices ahead of his speech. He lost a runoff vote to leftist former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva on Sunday but has yet to concede.

Meanwhile, Brazilian truckers supportive of President Jair Bolsonaro blocked hundreds of roads to protest his election loss.

Since da Silva’s victory many truck drivers have jammed traffic in areas across the country and said they will not acknowledge Bolsonaro’s defeat. Bolsonaro has not spoken publicly since the official results were released more than 36 hours ago, nor phoned da Silva to concede.

The highway to and from the international airport in Sao Paulo – Brazil’s most populous state and largest economy – was blocked and dozens of flights were cancelled. Videos on social media showed travellers rolling their suitcases at night along the highway to the airport. Access was partially re-established as of 8am local time.

In neighbouring Minas Gerais, a key battleground state in the election, a video on social media showed a protester telling a reporter: “We won’t stop as long as we don’t have a response from our president.”

The man, wearing a green-and-yellow shirt – the colours of the Brazilian flag and of the nation’s conservative movement – claimed the election was “fraudulent” and warned of future protests.

“We want Bolsonaro in 2023 and for the years to come,” he said.

In 2018, an 11-day trucker strike brought Brazil to a halt, caused food prices to spike, and left supermarket shelves without products as gas stations ran out of fuel. It caused billions in losses and revealed the vast power that truckers possess, particularly when they organise through social media platforms.

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Bolsonaro, a lawmaker at the time and months away from winning that year’s presidential election, was an outspoken supporter of the truckers, who became a constituency of his. This year, his administration limited interstate fuel taxes to help bring down prices and launched a financial aid programme for truckers just ahead of the presidential election campaign.

A majority of Brazilian Supreme Court justices early Tuesday voted to order the federal highway police to clear the blocked roads immediately. The vote was still taking place as of 9 am local time, with partial results posted on the court’s website.

As of 8am local time Tuesday, highway police had removed nearly 200 blockades, according to the Ministry of Justice.

Federal public prosecutors in Sao Paulo and Goias states said they had opened investigations into the blockades.

Da Silva’s Workers’ Party has accused Bolsonaro’s campaign of deploying the police force to create traffic jams and deter people from voting on election day, when videos of officials stopping buses shot across social media.

The party said the alleged efforts were particularly focused in the northeast region that is a Workers’ Party stronghold.

Alexandre de Moraes, who presides over the nation’s electoral authority, said police check points merely delayed voters from reaching polls. He ordered the immediate suspension of all highway police operations.

Bolsonaro lost the race by a thin margin, garnering 49.1 per cent of the vote to da Silva’s 50.9 per cent. It was the tightest presidential race since Brazil’s return to democracy over three decades ago.

Much like former US President Donald Trump, whom Bolsonaro openly admires, the far-right incumbent repeatedly questioned the reliability of the country’s electoral system, claiming electronic voting machines are prone to fraud. He never provided any proof, even when ordered to do so by the electoral court.

Dozens of journalists from both national and international media remained camped outside the presidential residence in the capital, Brasilia, awaiting any sign that Bolsonaro might speak about the election or the highway blockades.

Additional reporting by Reuters