DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

The Brazilian playbook for defending democracy

February 18, 2026
in News
The Brazilian playbook for defending democracy

Brazil’s former president was sentenced to 27 years in prison late last year for plotting a coup. The details may sound familiar: Jair Bolsonaro lost an election. He claimed it was stolen from him and rallied supporters to storm the nation’s capital, Brasilia. The insurrection even took place in early January (2023).

However, the parallels between Bolsonaro and President Donald Trump go back a lot further than the coup attempt. Bolsonaro rode a wave of voter discontent to the Brazilian presidency in 2018. He was a populist and a nationalist with anti-democratic impulses, an itchy trigger finger on Twitter, and, maybe most importantly, about half his country firmly behind him. 

He even got himself nicknamed “The Trump of the Tropics.”

But when the dust settled, after Bolsonaro’s failed coup attempt, the two presidents’ paths diverged. Bolsonaro was indicted, tried and convicted for inciting his followers and attempting to overthrow the rightfully elected government.

He’s in prison and barred from running for office for decades to come.

In the United States, meanwhile, Trump is back in office.

To find out why one former president is behind bars while the other is back in power, Vox’s Zack Beauchamp traveled to Brazil.

As Beauchamp tells Today, Explained host Noel King, he was interested in “why Brazil’s institutions, its Congress and its Supreme Court were so much more resistant than their American peers to power grabs and attempts to rule as an imperial executive than the US ones were.”

The answer is complex but full of lessons for the US. For more, listen to our episode that traces the rise — and fall — of Bolsonaro, and hear what America may be able to borrow from Brazil’s chaotic political system. 

Find Today, Explained wherever you get your podcasts.

This story was supported by a grant from Protect Democracy. Vox had full discretion over the content of this reporting.

The post The Brazilian playbook for defending democracy appeared first on Vox.

No Longer Off Limits, the Strait of Hormuz Remains Thorny Politically
News

No Longer Off Limits, the Strait of Hormuz Remains Thorny Politically

by New York Times
April 10, 2026

For the last several weeks, sailing a ship through the Strait of Hormuz was perilous, given the risk of Iranian ...

Read more
News

Why this Octavia Butler page-turner is the ultimate book club pick

April 10, 2026
News

A 1.9-billion-year-old bedrock will soon house the world’s first permanent nuclear waste site

April 10, 2026
News

Book club skeptic? So was Roxane Gay. Here’s what converted her

April 10, 2026
News

Journalist warns Trump ‘lit the world on fire’ — and gave other leaders cover for abuses

April 10, 2026
‘Stop doing favors for Mr Putin’: WSJ rakes Trump over coals for latest Russia gift

‘Stop doing favors for Mr Putin’: WSJ rakes Trump over coals for latest Russia gift

April 10, 2026
Peruvians choosing a president from 35-candidate pool in Sunday’s election

Peruvians choosing a president from 35-candidate pool in Sunday’s election

April 10, 2026
Melania Trump denies close ties to Jeffrey Epstein in rare public statement

Melania Trump denies close ties to Jeffrey Epstein in rare public statement

April 10, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026