brazil

'Get lost': After convicting its own despot, this country has no patience for Trump

Brazil writer Jack Nicas tells the New York Times that a despot-weary Brazil has had it with President Donald Trump chest-thumping for his despot Brazilian friend.

In an article entitled “Brazil Keeps Telling Trump to Get Lost,” Nicas said Trump made his strong-arm tactics clear.

“Drop the charges against former President Jair Bolsonaro of attempting a coup,” writes Nicas. “To show he was serious, he hit Brazil with punishing tariffs, launched a trade investigation and imposed some of the most severe sanctions at his disposal against the Supreme Court justice overseeing the case.”

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But Brazil responded on Thursday by convicting Bolsonaro anyway, handing him more than 27 years in prison for overseeing a failed plot to retain power after losing the 2022 elections.

“Does anyone believe that a tweet from a foreign government official will change a ruling in the Supreme Court?” said Justice Flávio Dino as he cast his vote to convict Bolsonaro.

President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s poll numbers, meanwhile, keep rising as he shows the U.S. how to properly deal with a despotic president, and he remains “fiercely backed by Brazil’s democratic institutions,” said Nicas.

Additionally, when Trump’s retaliatory 50 percent tariffs on Brazilian exports kicked in, Brazil’s global exports rose 4 percent because China saw an opening — thanks to Trump — and eagerly stepped up to the plate.

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Nicas said Trump’s government has “already used some of its most powerful tools,” and if the tariffs continue American voters may start demanding why they have pay more for beef, coffee and sugar just to protect a convicted Brazilian ex-president.

“What is clear is that the White House’s campaign against Brazil did not stop Mr. Bolsonaro’s conviction, but it did hurt America’s image in the country and push its largest ally in the Western Hemisphere closer to China,” wrote Nicas. “Mr. Lula has spoken with President Xi Jinping of China at least twice since the U.S. tariffs took effect — but not once with Mr. Trump.”

Read the New York Times report at this link.

'Absurd': Economist unleashes on Trump for 'imposing a tax on Americans' to punish ally

President Donald Trump's threat to hit Brazil with a 50% tariff on all imported goods due to a political dispute will likely hurt everyday Americans far more than the Brazilian government, according to one economist.

Trump sent a letter earlier this week to Brazilian President Luiz Ignacio Lula de Silva, informing him that the United States would be officially rolling out the new tariffs in response to the prosecution of former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro. Trump insisted that prosecutors drop the charges against Bolsonaro "immediately" if it hopes to avoid the tariff. Brazilian authorities have charged Bolsonaro with staging a coup in an attempt to remain in power on January 8, 2023 after losing his reelection bid. Bolsonaro fled to Trump's adopted home state of Florida after his election loss, but returned to Brazil in March of 2023.

During a Thursday segment on MSNBC's "Deadline: White House," host Nicolle Wallace asked University of Michigan economics professor Justin Wolfers his thoughts on Trump's threats. The economist to quip that Trump was going to "put the coup in Cupertino" and that Starbucks customers should be sure to keep an eye out for the "insurrection infusion fee."

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"So the most important part of this: Yes, he's meddling in Brazilian politics by imposing a tax on Americans," Wolfers said. "You and i are going to be paying higher taxes at Starbucks, on juice, on all the things that we import from Brazil — and Brazil is a very important trading partner — in order to help the leader of a failed coup get off the hook."

Wolfers went on to note the "absurdity" of Trump's latest tariff, reminding viewers that it was being imposed under a "national emergency" that Trump declared in order to announce tariffs unilaterally without Congressional input. He lamented that in the case of Brazil, the supposed "emergency" was "that the leader of a failed coup in another country might go to jail" and that "another country might exercise its sovereign rights."

"This is utterly absurd. The idea that the courts haven't intervened and shut all this down is crazy," he said. "Let me show the absurdity in another way: The key argument for tariffs is so that we can make stuff at home. Good luck growing coffee in the United States! I mean, my friends in Hawaii tell me there's seven and a half plants and there's six people and a goat who were farming coffee."

Unlike other countries Trump has subjected to tariffs, the U.S. does not have a trade deficit with Brazil but a trade surplus, meaning that the South American G20 country buys more from the U.S. than the U.S. does from Brazil. However, the U.S. does import a significant amount of grocery items — like meat, produce and coffee — from Brazil.

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Watch the video of Wolfers' comments below, or by clicking this link.

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'Invulnerable': Trump's threat against US ally suggests he 'feels utterly unbound'

Although President Donald Trump often attacks some of the United States' closest longtime allies — including Canada — he is quick to praise authoritarian far-right figures like Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, who was voted out off and replaced by left-wing Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Bolsonaro is under fire in Brazil for his efforts to stay in office despite losing the election.

Trump, claiming that Bolsonaro is being treated unfairly, is threatening to impose a 55 percent tariff on all Brazilian goods imported into the United States — a development that CNN's Dana Bash discussed with two reporters, Bloomberg News' Ron Brownstein and the Associated Press' Seung Min Kim, during a Thursday afternoon, July 10 broadcast.

Bash noted that Trump is calling Bolsonaro's trial a "witch hunt" and is using his "economic levers" against Brazil. And she pointed out that the U.S./Brazil relationship is far from an example of "unfair trade imbalances" — as there is a "$6.8 billion trade surplus with Brazil."

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Brownstein told Bash and Min Kim, "There are two large points you can make about this. One is that Trump is kind of running a modern version of the Comintern…. from the Soviet era, where both he and JD Vance are systematically trying to promote the prospects of far-right ethno-nationalist parties around the world: the AFD in Germany, Hungary, etc."

The Bloomberg News reporter continued, "But I think something is even bigger here, and that affects also the way Trump is governing at home — which is that this is just the latest evidence that he feels utterly unbound in his second term. That all of the constraints that limited him in any way in his first term, whether from Congress or the courts or from officials that he had to appoint within his own administration — all of that has faded away."

To illustrate his point, Brownstein referenced the recent presence of militarized law enforcement in Los Angeles' MacArthur Park.

Brownstein told Bash and Min Kim, "In L.A. earlier this week, he sent a convoy of armored vehicles and National Guard — not just ICE — heavily armed, armored National Guard into a public park in an American city. And so, I kind of look at this as a piece with that, where he basically feels there are no constraints limiting him on basically trying to bend institutions at home and abroad to his will. And generally speaking, feeling that you are invulnerable and impregnable is the predicate, I think, to overreaching as a political leader."

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Watch the full video below or at this link.

- YouTube www.youtube.com

'Disgrace': Trump mocked over letter that 'reads as if it was written by a fifth grader'

On Wednesday, President Donald Trump wrote a letter to Brazilian President Luiz Ignacio Lula de Silva announcing that the U.S. was imposing a 50% tariff on all imported goods from the South American country – and revealed that his reason for doing so was more political than economic.

In the letter — which was written in Trump's signature style of randomly capitalized letters and all-caps adjectives – Trump began by attacking the ongoing trial of former President Jair Bolsonaro, who is being charged with attempting a coup to stay in power after losing his reelection bid. He called the trial "an international disgrace" and a "Witch Hunt that should end IMMEDIATELY" before pivoting to the tariff announcement.

"In addition, we have had years to discuss our Trading Relationship with Brazil, and have concluded that we must move away from the longstanding, and very unfair trade relationship engendered by Brazil's Tariff, and Non-Tariff, Policies and Trade Barriers," the letter read. "Our relationship has been, unfortunately, far from Reciprocal. Please understand that the 50% number is far less than what is needed to have the Level Playing Field we must have with your Country. And it is necessary to have this to rectify the grave injustices of the current regime."

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Bespoke Investment micro strategist George Pearkes debunked Trump's claims about the United States' trade relationship with Brazil, pointing out that the U.S. actually has a trade surplus with the G20 economy. He further opined that the letter was an attempt "to steal the sovereignty of Brazil."

"[T]here's really no other way to describe this," Pearkes wrote. "It's an effort to overthrow their domestic political institutions."

Progressive organizer Murshed Zaheed lamented on Bluesky that Trump was using "CAPS LOCK in official White House letter[head]" while "also interfering with domestic affairs of a democratically elected government of a sovereign nation." Film editor Michael Sweeney commented that the letter was "barely literate," while author Bea Caicoya commented that Trump's letter "reads as if it was written by a fifth grader high on [1990s cartoon] Pinky and the Brain."

"Lawless authoritarianism at home. Stealing sovereignty abroad. But only for this One Special Boy, because we've decided nothing matters & no one else who swore oaths needs to do their damn jobs," wrote University of Wisconsin-Madison political science professor Mark Copelovitch. "It's maddening & unserious & we should stop it."

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