Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Bolsonaro's Son Enters 2026 Race While The Big Centrist Machine Stays On The Sidelines


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • Flávio Bolsonaro presses ahead with a 2026 bid despite resistance from major centrist parties.
  • The Liberal Party wants to turn his campaign into seats and leverage in Congress.
  • His move is tied to softer 8 January sentences and to new right-wing allies abroad.

Flávio Bolsonaro is pressing ahead as his father's chosen candidate for Brazil's 2026 election, even without the blessing of the“Centrão” blocs that dominate Congress.

In a closed meeting in Brasília, Liberal Party president Valdemar Costa Neto presented the senator to the PL benches as the official pre-candidate and stressed that this reflects the will of Jair Bolsonaro, jailed and barred from the race.

Inside the party, strategists calculate that the Bolsonaro name guarantees about 20% of the vote, enough to keep Flávio competitive for a second-round place.

They hope the presidential contest will help elect up to 125 federal deputies and about 25 senators, turning a family brand into a larger force in Congress.



The main obstacle is rejection. Opinion polls show Flávio with high negatives, and the Centrão told him so directly at a dinner in his home.
Flávio Bolsonaro Eyes Regional Allies Amid Controversy
Leaders of PP and União Brasil argued that he lacks“electoral density” and gave no timetable for support. They are watching to see whether he can grow beyond a loyal base that believes his father faces harsher treatment in the courts than many on the left.

The controversial“PL da dosimetria”, already approved in the lower house, would reduce and reorganise sentences for those convicted over the 8 January attack, potentially shortening Jair Bolsonaro's 27-year stay in prison.

Flávio first hinted that his candidacy had a“price” – progress on this bill – but now insists his decision is irreversible and“not for sale”. To thicken his profile, the senator is preparing a roadshow.

In January he is expected to seek meetings with Argentina's libertarian president Javier Milei and Chile's right-wing contender José Antonio Kast, who faces communist candidate Jeannette Jara in a polarised runoff.

Those images would place Flávio inside a Latin American network of leaders promising order, market-friendly reforms and a tougher line on crime and migration.

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The Rio Times

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