Lula returns to a divided Brazil
The presidential election campaign was highly charged, reflecting the gulf between various segments of Brazilian society. This report centers on three people from Sao Paulo, who shared their competing visions for the future of their country before, during and after the election — right up to the new president's inauguration: a left-wing activist, an arms dealer and an evangelical Christian.
For Lula's supporters, his triumph promises the restoration of a pluralistic democracy serving all Brazilians. For those who back Bolsonaro, who liberalized the economy and championed the conservative values of the fast-growing evangelical Christian community, his defeat has been devastating. But reactions on the street following Lula's narrow victory show that the "Bolsonarismo" ideology remains very much alive.
On Sunday, thousands of Bolsanaro supporters stormed the Congress building and other government offices in Brasilia. President Lula has condemned the attacks, calling them "barbarism."