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Brazil's Lula Gets His Best Revenge in the Company of the Queen PDF Print E-mail
2006 - March 2006
Written by Arthur Ituassu   
Wednesday, 08 March 2006 09:34

Brazil's Lula and first lady Mariza Letícia with Queen ElizabethWhen Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva toured the Tropicália exposition at London's Barbican center during his state visit to Britain on 7-9 March 2006, he may well have recalled part of the song named for the cultural movement that changed his country in the late 1960s: "I run the movement, I guide the Carnaval, I open up the monument".

Tropicália was a passionate and articulate response to the military regime of the time - which quickly cracked down on the movement, arresting (among other key figures) the musician Gilberto Gil. At Lula's side as he toured Tropicália was Gil, his Minister of Culture.

As several British newspapers pointed out on the eve of his trip, Lula now has many reasons to feel proud of his political performance. For almost two years, he has been hobbled by a series of corruption scandals that mocked the image of purity that his Partido dos Trabalhadores (Workers' Party / PT) had preached since it was fighting military rule in the 1980s.

Now, with just seven months until the presidential election in October, Lula is doing well again in the opinion polls. And the PT's most dangerous enemy, former President Fernando Henrique Cardoso's Partido da Social Democracia Brasileira (Brazilian Social Democracy Party / PSDB), has been embroiled in an internal dispute and has not yet decided whom it will run against Lula.

The numbers in São Paulo are representative of Lula's current strength, since both of the PSDB's candidates are paulistas. While José Serra is running the city, Geraldo Alckmin is the state governor.

The most recent poll in São Paulo indicates that neither of the two Social Democrats would defeat Lula today, countering perceptions that the President's popularity was growing only in poor regions of the country - particularly in the Northeast, where support for Lula is very strong.

Confident and far from PSDB's internal conflicts, Lula can use the luxury of being in London to gain more political ammunition for the election battle. Two big issues are the main focus of his British visit: agriculture and ethanol. Both can help him be re-elected.

"Britain is the most important partner for us in the agriculture business", says a Brazilian diplomat, who asked not to be identified. "London is also not happy with the common agricultural policy of the European Union, which benefits mostly the French."

It is natural, then, that Brazil's Foreign Minister, Celso Luiz Nunes Amorim, has been invited to speak at the London School of Economics on March 10 about commerce and agriculture liberalization. His Ministry, the Itamaraty, is not hiding anyone who still has hope for the Doha round of World Trade Organization (WTO) negotiations on lowering trade barriers.

Also on March 10, London will host a crucial gathering of one of the WTO's many sub-groups, the Group of Six (the United States, the European Union, India, Japan, Australia, as well as Brazil itself) to discuss the Doha round and seek ways forward.

Meanwhile, Lula will certainly try to persuade British Prime Minister Tony Blair to support a heads-of-government meeting before the WTO's next round of talks expires.

The American trade representative, Rob Portman, has already told Brazilian diplomats that President George W Bush is "100% ready" for Lula's initiative. If Lula wins something in the historically unfair commercial and agriculture environment, he would surely use it in the election campaign.

Lula presented the other issue - ethanol - himself in a newspaper article on the opening day of his visit. He wrote: "In the search for new, sustainable economic models, the international community is coming to recognize the need for a radical rethink in relation to the generation of energy, and Brazil is responding by using clean, renewable, alternative energy sources to an ever-greater extent.

"[...] The ethanol Brazil produces from sugar cane is attracting worldwide interest, for it is one of the cheapest and most dependable types of fuel derived from renewable sources" (see "Join Brazil in planting oil", The Guardian, 7 March 2006).

In London, Brazilian diplomats will be discussing with Britain the possibility of producing ethanol in a joint venture in and with South Africa. This is part of a major economic and political partnership involving India, Brazil and South Africa (the "India, Brazil and South Africa [África do Sul] Dialogue Forum", thus "IBSA" or "IBAS").

The initiative, in which energy diplomacy plays a key part, would give the country a role in the world energy market through exporting ethanol as well as the technology for using it as a day-by-day resource.

Brazil has more than its share of economic and social problems - and has been too slow to improve the lives of its poor through basic education, health care, public security and equal access to justice.

But at the end of its first term in office, Lula's government is putting its muscle into diplomacy as a way to consolidate its political platform internationally, differentiating itself from past administrations. It is now a matter of identity.

Arthur Ituassu is professor of international relations at the Pontifícia Universidade Católica in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. You can read more from him at his website: www.ituassu.com.br. This article appeared originally in Open Democracy - www.opendemocracy.net.



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Comments (19)Add Comment
Not very smart Arthur !
written by Guest, March 08, 2006


The EU country importing the most Brazilian agricultural products is NOT the U.K......but Germany !!!!!

And as to the unfair commercial and agriculture environment, I guess you are talking about BRAZIL !
Brazil has already a huge trade surplus with the EU.
Brazil is not subsidising only their agriculture but ALL their export industries.
Brazil has hunger and under nourrished citizens by the tens of millions, while proclaiming themselves the garden of the world and exporting tens of billions of US$ of agricultural products.....instead of first feeding their own society !!!!!!
Brazil will just export and import as little as possible !

Simple demonstration that the word FAIR and RECIPROCITY IS NOT EVEN IN A BRAZILIAN DICTIONARY.
THE SAME APPLIES TO YOUR WORLD RECORD OF WEALTH INEQUALITY, IMPUNITY, CORRUPTION, VOTE BUYING, MOST VIOLENT COUNTRY IN THE WORLD, JUST TO NAME A FEW !!!!!

Re: Not very smart Arthur !
written by Guest, March 09, 2006
Do you know one thing?

Go jump in a lake (a very cold one)

You are a clown!!

A Brazilian
Luuuule
written by Guest, March 09, 2006
How can they go wrong with a president named Lula?
...
written by Guest, March 09, 2006
Lula rocks! Long live Lula!
Lying scum Lula
written by Guest, March 10, 2006
Lula socks c**k!! I hope he drops dead tomorrow. Scumbag lying piece of s**t!!!! Do you know one thing s**thead: O Lula e o palhaco . . . .
...
written by Guest, March 10, 2006
Despite the armies of armchair ideologues and pundit-wannabes swarming in cyberspace, and whatever your opinion of him (mine's isn't terribly high), the bottom line is:

Lula is president of the Republic, we're not and will never get there,
...
written by Guest, March 11, 2006
Viva Lula! O melhor presidente do Brasil que nós já viamos. Nós gostamos de você!
...
written by Guest, March 12, 2006
He (Lula) is the best leader Brazil even had? That doesn't speak well for the majority of Brazilians. How sad! I will be voting for the first time in the next Brazilian presidential election. And it sure won't be for a repeat performance by that clown.
Lying scum Bush
written by Guest, March 13, 2006
Bush socks c**k!! I hope he drops dead tomorrow. Scumbag lying piece of s**t!!!! Do you know one thing s**thead: O Bush e o palhaco . . . .
...
written by Guest, March 16, 2006
Well, if USA is the termometer of our USA driven capitalistic society, then we can expect the election ever dumber presidents in the future, at least southern presidents in USA and nothern presidents in Brazil, (funny how that works huh?). I'll take Lula over Bush any time of the day, even when stranded in the Texan desert. But seriously, wtf is so wrong with Lula? At least his party and part of the esquerda isn't boycotting every single motion in congress, hell, Lula didn't even get land for his homies with the red flag, for all we know, the hammer and the scythe are still separated, how the hell could he have been a better president? After we get past our inequities left be the US sponsored Military Dictorship, we will be just as paralised as the US government, and many that's what we already begun to feel.I bet most of you can already feel the tightening grip of the bible thumpers.
The Pangare And the Queen
written by Guest, March 17, 2006
Nothing like a total idiot standing next to the Queen.
...
written by Guest, March 20, 2006
Did the queen fart while in the presence of Lula?
...
written by Guest, March 20, 2006
Did the Queens breath stink?
Lula and the Queen (from the Englishman)
written by Guest, March 21, 2006
They're both a couple of cunts. They both take taxpayers' money and do very little in return. Did Lula meet Charkes? Now that would be funny two clowns pretending to be important.
What disturbs about Lula?
written by Guest, March 28, 2006
Is that because americans are losing control over Brazil?
Losing control over South America may be?
Is that because Lula really doesn't hide from anybody that he dislikes Bush and his government that give a damn to the miserable americans?
Why Lula disturbs so much??
That's may be a very good reason to vote for him!!
If it's not good for US, it's good for Brazil!!!
That's the key point isn't it? smilies/wink.gif
Re: What disturbs about Lula?
written by Guest, March 29, 2006
He's a joke and you cant see it.
The Man is a con artist. Just like all American politicians.

These con artist specialize in gaining your confidence with words like "we can," and "I will," only to bait and switch with their own "hidden agendas."

WAKE UP SLEEPING BRAZILIAN.

I like you guys. I dont like pathological lying politicians.
...
written by Guest, March 30, 2006
What??? Lula dislikes Bush? They've become best friends, don't you read the papers? Chavez doesn't like bush, not Lula.
Hi american friends
written by Guest, March 31, 2006
Just tell me something:
where do you get your news from?
Are they only in English and Portuguese?
If so... I can understand why you think this way.
You have Bush. Isn't it?
Just check the OMC site or ONU or others to see how they are friends!
...
written by Guest, May 17, 2006

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