Rio de Janeiro is rejoicing after voters inflicted a humiliating electoral defeat on a widely loathed neo-Pentecostal bishop considered by some to be the worst mayor in the city’s history.
Marcelo Crivella, a gospel-singing preacher who has branded homosexuality a “terrible evil” and had shunned Rio’s annual carnival, lost in every one of the city’s 49 constituencies in Sunday’s run-off vote.
Observers called the result a triumph for diversity and a blow to Brazil’s far-right president, Jair Bolsonaro, who had backed Crivella’s campaign.
“Rio is free of the worst government in its history – of its most negligent, most unprepared, most prejudiced government,” the victor, Eduardo Paes, proclaimed after his landslide win.
“I want to tell all cariocas [Rio citizens] that today – whatever your faith, orientation or skin colour – you are free,” added Paes, a samba-loving centre-right politician who was mayor from 2009 until 2016.
Many voters have misgivings about Paes but there was widespread jubilation on Monday as news of Crivella’s catastrophe sank in.
“He was probably our most incompetent mayor in more than 100 years and at the same time the least carioca of them all. So it’s a major, major, major relief to be rid of him,” said Pedro Doria, a Rio-based author and editor of the political newsletter Meio. “This guy was a major reactionary in a city that is driven by such a freewheeling spirit.”
Rio newspapers united to gloat over the demise of the former missionary who is the nephew of the founder of the controversial Universal Church of the Kingdom of God.
Extra declared the bishop’s thrashing a “Universal defeat” while O Dia celebrated Crivella’s “hiding”. “Not even President Bolsonaro’s support was enough to help Crivella’s campaign take off,” the newspaper said, claiming voters had “chased him out” of the mayoral palace.
O Dia’s columnist and owner, Nuno Vasconcellos, hailed voters for snubbing the evangelical mayor’s “false preaching” and said: “[Rio] has rejected the wolf in lamb’s clothing incarnated by Marcelo Crivella”.
O Globo’s political commentator Bernardo Mello Franco said the defeat “had a hint of exorcism about it” and enthused: “2020 will be remembered as the year cariocas freed themselves from Crivella.”
“Not even the city’s greatest party escaped the bishop’s holy war,” Mello Franco complained of the mayor’s hostility towards Rio’s carnival parade, which Crivella never attended.
Mello Franco called Crivella’s “fiasco” a setback to the Universal Church’s project to tighten its already considerable grip on Brazilian politics by packing the corridors of power with believers.
It is also a reverse for Bolsonaro, who publicly endorsed Crivella as a way of thwarting the “poisonous” left.
In one campaign ad, Crivella – who critics claim governed for cronies and churchgoers, not the city as a whole – clutched Bolsonaro’s hand and declared: “The president of Brazil has given me a mission and I will fulfil it.”
“God is with us,” Bolsonaro replied.
“Amen,” said Crivella.
Rio was not the only city to reject Bolsonarian chauvinism in Sunday’s second-round vote amid growing signs some Brazilians are tiring of their president’s incendiary style.
São Paulo elected Bruno Covas, a centre-right member of one of the city’s most famous political dynasties.
“The days of denialism and obscurantism are numbered. São Paulo has said ‘Yes’ to science and moderation,” Covas told supporters in an unmistakable reference to Bolsonaro’s anti-scientific handling of the Covid-19 epidemic. More than 172,000 Brazilians have been killed by a disease Bolsonaro has dismissed as a “bit of a cold”.
Pro-Bolsonaro candidates were also defeated in the cities of Belém and Fortaleza. In the election’s first round a fortnight ago, Bolsonaro-backed candidates lost in cities including Manaus, Recife and Belo Horizonte.
The Workers’ party (PT) of Bolsonaro’s leftwing nemisis, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, also fared badly, failing to win control of a single state capital for the first time since democracy returned in 1985.
Another leftwing force, the Socialist and Liberty party (Psol), appears to be filling part of the void, with its 38-year-old candidate, Guilherme Boulos, picking up more than 2m votes in São Paulo.
“This wasn’t our election,” Boulos told supporters from the rooftop of his home, where he is recovering from Covid-19, “but we will prevail.”
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