He’s been known in recent years as the “Trump of the Tropics”: Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro’s right-wing antics and authoritarian vision have positioned him as one of the world’s closest analogues for the former U.S. president.
This came into focus a couple of years ago in the White House’s Rose Garden, when Bolsonaro stood alongside Trump and denounced “fake news.” The Republican gushed with pride soon after.
Two years later, as Reuters reported, there’s an eerily similar echo coming out of Brazil.
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro said on Thursday he would hand over power to whoever wins next year’s presidential election cleanly – but not if there is any fraud. His comments will do little to dispel the concerns of his critics, who fear that the far-right former army captain will not accept any election loss in next year’s vote.
The political dynamic will be painfully familiar to many U.S. voters: after his 2018 victory, Bolsonaro has peddled unsubstantiated allegations of election improprieties. With polls now showing the incumbent trailing, and the incumbent facing corruption allegations, Bolsonaro is letting the public know he’s committed to honoring the results of the election, but only if he’s satisfied that there was no “fraud.”
You don’t need a crystal ball to predict what’ll happen in Brasilia next year: Bolsonaro is borrowing a page from the Republican Party’s playbook.








