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“At the end of the line, we suffer almost the same evil,” was what President Jair Bolsonaro told Rio de Janeiro Mayor Marcello Crivella last month when he recorded the video to support the re-election of the ally.
And what was the “same evil”? Bolsonaro noted: “a great television station.” He did not nominate this time. But previously she had revealed other pronouncements from which station she says she is being persecuted is: Globo. According to the president in the video, responsible for “unjustifiable attacks” on him and the mayor.
When Crivella was arrested early Tuesday morning, he said he was again the target of “political persecution.” The mayor has also made it clear that this “persecution” would be led by Organizações Globo.
It is on the basis of this, so called by them, “common enemy” that the Bolsonaristas increasingly defend an alliance with the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God. Crivella is the pastor of this neo-Pentecostal denomination founded by his uncle, Bishop Edir Macedo.
The political arm of Universal is the Republican Party, chaired by the deputy and pastor Marcos Pereira (elected by São Paulo), current vice president of the Chamber and who has just announced his support for Arthur Lira (PP-AL), Planalto’s candidate for the succession of Rodrigo Maia (DEM-RJ) at the head of the House.
The two sons of Bolsonaro with electoral domicile in Rio de Janeiro are affiliated with the Republicans, Senator Flávio Bolsonaro and Councilor Carlos Bolsonaro.
In other words, Bolsonaro and Crivella already have much more in common than the feeling of persecution by Globo Organizations.
This cake of things in common provokes the fear of another president: that “the persecution” of Globo and the politicians who oppose him and his children will continue and become as soon as he leaves the government. This is why Bolsonaro works so hard for reelection.