Brazil and U.S. Trends Today: A Conservative Vision
By Laiz Rodrigues
As of March 15, 2025, Brazil and the United States stand at pivotal moments, shaped by economic realities, cultural shifts, and political currents that resonate with conservative principles. Both nations, though distinct in their histories and challenges, share a growing appetite for policies that prioritize sovereignty, traditional values, and pragmatic governance over globalist ideologies and progressive experimentation. Here’s a look at the trends defining these countries today through a conservative lens.
Brazil: Economic Resilience and Cultural Conservatism
Brazil’s trajectory in 2025 reflects a nation reclaiming its footing after years of political turbulence and economic uncertainty. Under President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, who returned to power in 2023, the country has seen a surprising economic uptick—GDP growth projections hover around 2.8% for 2024, driven by robust domestic demand and a labor market bolstered by conservative-friendly policies like fiscal transfers. Yet, conservatives in Brazil view Lula’s center-left administration with suspicion, seeing it as a temporary detour from the rightward shift embodied by Jair Bolsonaro’s tenure (2019–2022).
Bolsonaro’s legacy—often dubbed “Bolsonarismo”—remains a potent force. The Liberal Party (PL), his political home, dominated the 2024 municipal elections, signaling that conservative values like family, faith, and national pride still resonate deeply. This isn’t just electoral noise; it’s a cultural statement. Brazil’s rural heartlands and growing evangelical communities continue to reject the secular, urban elitism of Lula’s Workers’ Party (PT). The conservative vision here is clear: less government meddling, more local control, and a defense of Judeo-Christian principles against the encroachment of progressive social policies.
On the environmental front, conservatives cheer Brazil’s resistance to what they see as hypocritical Western pressure. The Amazon, a global flashpoint, saw deforestation drop by half in Lula’s first year, but the right argues this is less about climate zealotry and more about practical land management—a win for sovereignty over foreign dictate. Meanwhile, Brazil’s agribusiness, a backbone of its economy, thrives without bowing to the green agendas of Europe or the U.S. left. This balance of economic pragmatism and cultural identity is the conservative ideal: a nation that feeds the world while staying true to itself.
United States: Populism and Pushback
Across the equator, the United States in 2025 is a battleground of ideas, with conservative populism flexing its muscles against a faltering progressive establishment. The Biden administration, now in its twilight, faces a nation weary of inflation, border insecurity, and cultural overreach. Conservatives point to a resurgent Republican Party, likely gearing up for a 2024 electoral sweep, as evidence that Americans crave a return to basics: secure borders, energy independence, and an end to what they call “woke” indoctrination in schools and institutions.
Economically, the U.S. conservative vision champions deregulation and tax cuts, arguing that Biden’s spending sprees—think trillions in climate and social programs—have fueled inflation without delivering prosperity. The trend toward energy dominance, a hallmark of the Trump era, is back in focus, with calls to unleash domestic oil and gas production rather than rely on foreign handouts or utopian renewables. Brazil’s own success with resource-driven growth offers a mirror: conservatives in both nations see natural wealth as a God-given right to exploit responsibly, not a guilt trip to atone for.
Culturally, the U.S. right is riding a wave of backlash against progressive excesses. From school board fights over gender ideology to Supreme Court battles over free speech, conservatives are winning hearts by framing themselves as defenders of common sense. The evangelical fervor that aligns with Brazil’s faithful finds its echo here, with faith-based voters rejecting secularism and demanding a government that respects their beliefs. The trend is unmistakable: a rejection of elite cosmopolitanism for a rooted, patriotic identity.
Shared Threads: Sovereignty and Skepticism
What ties Brazil and the U.S. together in 2025 is a conservative ethos of skepticism—toward global institutions, climate alarmism, and cultural relativism. In Brazil, this manifests as defiance against EU trade pressures and UN environmental mandates. In the U.S., it’s a middle finger to NATO overreach and World Economic Forum platitudes. Both nations’ conservatives see their countries as exceptional, not pawns in a borderless world order.
The U.S.-Brazil relationship, historically pragmatic, could deepen under this shared vision. Trade deals favoring American surpluses and Brazilian exports—like the EU-Mercosur pact in progress—fit the conservative playbook: mutual benefit without ideological strings. Bolsonaro’s past flirtation with Trump-style diplomacy hints at what’s possible if the U.S. right retakes power in 2025 and Brazil’s PL consolidates its gains by 2026. A conservative axis could emerge, prioritizing bilateral strength over multilateral mush.
Challenges Ahead
Yet, the road isn’t without bumps. In Brazil, Lula’s coalition still wields power, and his ability to cobble together centrist support threatens the conservative surge. Inflation, though tamed, lingers as a risk, and the PT’s history of corruption scandals keeps distrust simmering. For U.S. conservatives, the challenge is unity—can a fractured GOP rally behind a single vision, or will infighting squander the populist momentum?
The Conservative Call
In 2025, Brazil and the United States are trending toward a conservative renaissance, not by fiat but by popular will. It’s a vision of nations unbound by guilt, unafraid to wield their resources, and unapologetic about their values. For conservatives, this isn’t just a trend—it’s a triumph of reality over rhetoric, a reclaiming of what works over what preaches. As both countries navigate the rest of the decade, the question isn’t whether this vision will endure, but how boldly it will be pursued.


