Thursday, April 18, 2024 | Shawwal 8, 1445 H
clear sky
weather
OMAN
25°C / 25°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Leader of Brazil’s homeless movement eyes presidency

minus
plus

He’s got barely one per cent in the polls so far, but 35-year-old leftist Guilherme Boulos says Brazil is ripe for a new face willing to take on the corrupt and powerful in October presidential elections.


“It’s David against Goliath,” Boulos acknowledged in an interview at his small office in Sao Paulo. ‘‘But it’s possible, because people are searching for a new form of doing politics.”


Boulos represents the opposite end of the spectrum to the wealthy, establishment figures currently in power in Brazil’s centre-right government. As head of the Homeless Workers’ Movement — a well-organised group known for high-profile occupations of vacant land and other stunts — he is also more radical and hands-on than many on the left.


But this university professor trained in philosophy and psychoanalysis might have remained on the national fringes if not for a spectacular endorsement from none other than leftist icon and ex-president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. In a barn-storming speech in April just before surrendering to go to prison to serve a 12-year sentence for corruption, Lula surprised many by speaking of Boulos as his political heir, telling him live on national television “never to give up.”


Boulos’s profile is also inextricably linked now to another big political drama — the gunning down of a popular, hard-hitting leftist councilwoman in Rio de Janeiro, Marielle Franco.


Like him, she belonged to the Socialism and Liberty Party.


And her still unsolved murder deepened the feeling among many that Brazil is sliding into a period of bitter political confrontation.


Boulos said he’s made for this kind of climate, with no hesitancy about taking the debate into the areas that the current crop of politicians refuses to confront. He may have rock-bottom polling figures, but Boulos said that can change. Signs of high voter abstention suggest Brazilians aren’t satisfied with the standard candidates.


A well-educated child of doctors, Boulos could lead a quiet, comfortable life. But he said he was driven not just to politics, but to activism, especially in support of Brazil’s vast number of poor and homeless.


He has been working with the Homeless Workers’ Movement for almost 20 years in some capacity and says that more on the left should practice what they preach. “What really bothers me is that many on the left talk about being there for the people but they aren’t ready really to listen to them, to stand at their side, to live with them,” he said. — AFP


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon