This story is from April 09, 2025
Brazil's democracy is 'inefficient' but solid
Who will prove to be the defender of democracy in these trials?
In Brazil, supporters of ex-President Jair Bolsonaro, who is on trial before the Constitutional Court for an attempted coup, are facing off against the Brazilian judiciary.
In France, supporters of the French right-wing populist Marine Le Pen, who was convicted of corruption, are protesting against what they consider a "political verdict".
And in South Korea, many people see President Yoon Suk Yeol, who was recently dismissed by South Korea's Constitutional Court, as a "martyr for democracy." Yeol had surprisingly imposed martial law in December 2024 to "protect the country from pro-North Korean anti-state forces."
For Brazilian political scientist Carlos Pereira from the University Fundacao Getulio Vargas, the criticism of Brazil's allegedly biased judiciary is actually a sign of its strength. "Those who lose always accuse the judiciary of being biased and unjust," he told DW.
When Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva was convicted and arrested for corruption in 2018, Lula's left-wing supporters had made the same argument.
"Similar allegations can be observed in France, Germany and the US," said Pereira, the co-author of the book titled "Why Didn't Brazilian Democracy Die?"
"The judiciary is not getting weaker based on the perception of people who are currently on the losing side," he said.
Generals on trial
Regardless of the outcome, the trial against Brazil's ex-President Bolsonaro is already historic. For the first time since the end of the military dictatorship (1964-1985), high-ranking military officers are standing trial before a civilian court.
In addition to Jair Bolsonaro, 33 further people have been charged, including former ministers and generals.
According to Brazil's Constitutional Court, the charges are "Violent abolition of the democratic rule of law, attempted coup plot on 8 January 2023, damage to monuments and membership of a criminal armed organization."
"The proceedings before the Constitutional Court show how robust the institutions of Brazilian democracy are," Pereira said.
However, the reasons for this resilience appear somewhat paradoxical.
Brazil: Inefficient, but democratic
According to Pereira, the "expensive and inefficient" interaction between Brazil's judiciary, parliament and government is precisely what prevents governments from implementing plans quickly.
"The government always lacks the majorities in Congress, no one can rule alone, it has to be negotiated, and this preserves democracy," he explained.
There has not been a president in Brazil with a stable majority in Congress since the first free elections after the end of the military dictatorship in 1989. A US-style merger of the legislative and executive branches against the judiciary, where judges are nominated by parliament, is inconceivable in Brazil, Pereira said.
Repeated impeachments
So far, two presidents have been removed from office in Brazil.
In 1992, President Fernando Collor de Melo was removed from office by Congress in impeachment proceedings due to corruption, and in 2016 the country's first female president, Dilma Rousseff, was impeached for tax and budgetary offenses, Pereira recalls.
Brazil's current President Lula was put on trial in 2018. He spent two years in prison for corruption.
"This proves that Brazilian institutions are strong and independent and capable of punishing misconduct, regardless of whether it is a right-wing or left-wing government," says Pereira.
More polarization in Brazil
"However, this does not mean that social polarization will decrease," Pereira told DW.
During the latest demonstrations last weekend in Sao Paulo, the extent of this split was evident.
Pro-Bolsonaro participant Ana Oliveira is convinced that "all right-wing politicians in Brazil are persecuted as right-wing extremists."
"We live in a dictatorship," she told the Brazilian newspaper Folha de S. Paulo.
Another demonstrator interpreted the events of January 8, 2023 as a "vendetta" by President Lula. "This was all arranged by Lula, he was angry with Bolsonaro," she told the same newspaper.
Even though the people interviewed at the demonstration were all certain that Bolsonaro will run in the 2026 presidential elections, experts consider this to be basically impossible. The ex-president has already been convicted of abuse of power and spreading fake news by the Brazilian Supreme Electoral Court and is therefore banned from running for political office until 2030.
In France, supporters of the French right-wing populist Marine Le Pen, who was convicted of corruption, are protesting against what they consider a "political verdict".
And in South Korea, many people see President Yoon Suk Yeol, who was recently dismissed by South Korea's Constitutional Court, as a "martyr for democracy." Yeol had surprisingly imposed martial law in December 2024 to "protect the country from pro-North Korean anti-state forces."
For Brazilian political scientist Carlos Pereira from the University Fundacao Getulio Vargas, the criticism of Brazil's allegedly biased judiciary is actually a sign of its strength. "Those who lose always accuse the judiciary of being biased and unjust," he told DW.
When Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva was convicted and arrested for corruption in 2018, Lula's left-wing supporters had made the same argument.
"Similar allegations can be observed in France, Germany and the US," said Pereira, the co-author of the book titled "Why Didn't Brazilian Democracy Die?"
Generals on trial
Regardless of the outcome, the trial against Brazil's ex-President Bolsonaro is already historic. For the first time since the end of the military dictatorship (1964-1985), high-ranking military officers are standing trial before a civilian court.
In addition to Jair Bolsonaro, 33 further people have been charged, including former ministers and generals.
According to Brazil's Constitutional Court, the charges are "Violent abolition of the democratic rule of law, attempted coup plot on 8 January 2023, damage to monuments and membership of a criminal armed organization."
"The proceedings before the Constitutional Court show how robust the institutions of Brazilian democracy are," Pereira said.
However, the reasons for this resilience appear somewhat paradoxical.
Brazil: Inefficient, but democratic
According to Pereira, the "expensive and inefficient" interaction between Brazil's judiciary, parliament and government is precisely what prevents governments from implementing plans quickly.
"The government always lacks the majorities in Congress, no one can rule alone, it has to be negotiated, and this preserves democracy," he explained.
There has not been a president in Brazil with a stable majority in Congress since the first free elections after the end of the military dictatorship in 1989. A US-style merger of the legislative and executive branches against the judiciary, where judges are nominated by parliament, is inconceivable in Brazil, Pereira said.
Repeated impeachments
So far, two presidents have been removed from office in Brazil.
In 1992, President Fernando Collor de Melo was removed from office by Congress in impeachment proceedings due to corruption, and in 2016 the country's first female president, Dilma Rousseff, was impeached for tax and budgetary offenses, Pereira recalls.
Brazil's current President Lula was put on trial in 2018. He spent two years in prison for corruption.
"This proves that Brazilian institutions are strong and independent and capable of punishing misconduct, regardless of whether it is a right-wing or left-wing government," says Pereira.
More polarization in Brazil
"However, this does not mean that social polarization will decrease," Pereira told DW.
During the latest demonstrations last weekend in Sao Paulo, the extent of this split was evident.
Pro-Bolsonaro participant Ana Oliveira is convinced that "all right-wing politicians in Brazil are persecuted as right-wing extremists."
"We live in a dictatorship," she told the Brazilian newspaper Folha de S. Paulo.
Another demonstrator interpreted the events of January 8, 2023 as a "vendetta" by President Lula. "This was all arranged by Lula, he was angry with Bolsonaro," she told the same newspaper.
Even though the people interviewed at the demonstration were all certain that Bolsonaro will run in the 2026 presidential elections, experts consider this to be basically impossible. The ex-president has already been convicted of abuse of power and spreading fake news by the Brazilian Supreme Electoral Court and is therefore banned from running for political office until 2030.
Top Comment
M
Monica
303 days ago
The goal must not be democracy, but good governance. Once this is decided, it should be an easy matter to reverse engineer on the starting and intermediate points that leads to good governance.Read allPost comment
Popular from World
- 'Blew himself up after being stopped at gate': What we know about Pakistan suicide bomb blast
- ‘No limits, no transparency, no controls’: US accuses China of covert nuclear tests as New START expires
- H-1B visa fee is here to stay: Immigration attorney says employees should hire through L-1 visa to bypass $100K
- Nick Fuentes says he can eat butter chicken but not what JD Vance wants him to: 'Save it for your Indian festival'
- Epstein’s deathbed will: Who stood to inherit multimillion-dollar fortune, and what about the victims?
end of article
Trending Stories
- Milwaukee Bucks vs Indiana Pacers (02-06-2026) game preview: When and where to watch, expected lineup, injury report, prediction, and more
- When was the last New England Patriots Super Bowl win? A look back at their most recent title
- “I felt terrible”: Olympian Chloe Kim opens up about the darkest days of her life amid romance with Myles Garrett
- How a single vote cost Drake Maye the NFL MVP to Matthew Stafford
- Pariksha Pe Charcha 2026 Live: What are the number of registrations?
- India beat England by 100 runs to clinch record sixth U-19 World Cup title
- “I don’t know about that”: Cooper DeJean finally addresses Nikki Bella dating buzz after viral WWE Raw moment in Philadelphia
Featured in world
- ‘Harvard is woke, we are not’: US to cut ties, end military training and fellowships with Ivy League giant
- 'Didn't make a mistake': Trump refuses to apologise for video depicting Obamas as monkeys
- Violent anti-govt protests return to Dhaka, this time against Yunus
- Suicide blast at Islamabad mosque kills 31, MEA snubs Pak claim of Indian hand
- Epstein’s deathbed will: Who stood to inherit multimillion-dollar fortune, and what about the victims?
- US accuses China of secret N-tests in 2020
Photostories
- 5 things we should never take back from a beach trip
- 6 appliances one should never leave running and unattended and why
- From elephants to bats: 5 unexpected swimmers in the wild
- Weekend Binge: After the ‘Ghooskhor Pandat’ row, films that sparked title controversies
- 6 sacred towns along the Ganges
- Did you know? This indigenous Assamese craft is India’s best-kept heritage secret
- Zendaya’s fashion evolution: A journey from girly pop to red carpet icon
- 5 homemade, chemical-free ant killer sprays; effective DIY methods
- Inside Rohit Sharma’s premium car collection: 5 high-end luxury cars he owns
- 10 iconic rajma dishes enjoyed across the globe
Videos
15:48 Gulf Power Shift? MBZ 'SNUBS' MBS; UAE Firms Pull Back From Saudi World Defence Show09:47 'Not Vassals Of Trump & Elon Musk': Spain's Deputy PM Makes Blistering Exit From 'Place Of Hate' X07:24 Trump 'STRIKES' Iran Minutes After Nuke Talks; US Slaps New Oil Sanctions, 14 Tankers Hit | Watch07:42 ‘WON’T GIVE UP’: Iran Cleric’s NUCLEAR Warning As Araghchi ‘Forces’ US To Keep Missiles Out Of Talks08:21 Trump's Meme Backfires; US Pres. Deletes Video Of Obamas As Monkeys | White House Blames Staffer08:34 Iran Bets On POWER As US War Looms; Rapidly Rebuilds Missiles As Nuke Sites Remain Quiet | Report07:01 ‘NO ICE IN MILAN’: Italians EXPLODE But Meloni Downplays Anger Against Trump's Agents | ‘Surreal’12:49 Greenland Rerun? Putin & Xi's Fear SPOOKS NATO Nation; Norway Raises Red Flag Over Svalbard09:54 Carney & Macron DARE Trump; Canada, France Open Consulates In Greenland To Oppose 'Capture Dream'
Up Next