The Arrogant Delusions of the Financial Times: Exposing How London Elites Completely Misread Brazil’s Conservative Revolution By
The Financial Times just couldn’t resist another smug dispatch from its ivory tower. In its recent piece on “The return of the Bolsonaros,” the outlet feigns analytical detachment while oozing condescension. It opens with theatrical shock: by the end of last year, the family supposedly “looked politically finished.” Jair Bolsonaro jailed on dubious coup charges, one son exiled, influence shattered. Yet here comes Flávio Bolsonaro, the “milder” eldest son, rising like some unexpected phoenix. How dare Brazilian voters refuse to obey the script written by globalist commentators? This isn’t journalism — it’s elite wishful thinking masquerading as insight, riddled with factual blind spots, loaded language, and a profound ignorance of Brazil’s raw political pulse.
Let’s dismantle the FT’s core blunder first: the absurd claim that the Bolsonaro name had grown weak. On the contrary, it has hardened into an unbreakable force, gaining potency with every passing day of Lula’s disappointments. Recent polls lay bare the reality the FT downplays. In the latest BTG Nexus survey from late March 2026, Flávio ties Lula dead even at 46% in a simulated runoff — a statistical tie within the margin of error. Other polls from Paraná Pesquisas, AtlasIntel, and Quaest show Flávio surging, closing gaps that once favored Lula by double digits. His first-round support has doubled in some trackers since December. This isn’t fragility; it’s a family brand that resonates because it embodies resistance to the very failures now haunting the left.
Bolsonarismo isn’t some fleeting “dynastic plot” or exotic far-right anomaly, as the FT sneers. It is a robust, majority-aligned worldview rooted in the lived experiences of tens of millions of Brazilians — working families, evangelicals, rural producers, small business owners, and security-conscious citizens who reject the soft-on-crime, globalist experiments of the PT (Workers’ Party). It champions unapologetic law and order against drug gangs and organized violence that terrorize favelas and cities alike. It demands economic freedom over bureaucratic strangulation and prioritizes Brazilian sovereignty against becoming a “Chinese colony,” as Flávio rightly warns. Crime now ranks as the top voter concern in multiple surveys, eclipsing even the economy. Lula’s own slip-ups — like suggesting drug dealers are “victims” of users — only underscore why Bolsonarismo thrives: it offers strength where the left offers excuses.
The FT’s tone drips with patronizing elitism when it praises Flávio’s “milder temperament” and vaccine stance as clever rebranding to make the family “palatable.” This is a subtle dagger at Jair Bolsonaro’s direct, no-nonsense style — the very authenticity that electrified voters fed up with polished liars in Brasília. Jair delivered tangible wins: pension reform that stabilized finances, pre-COVID growth that lifted millions, record lows in Amazon deforestation through enforcement (not empty rhetoric), and a pro-sovereignty foreign policy that balanced relations without subservience. The FT glosses over these while fixating on scandals like “rachadinhas” allegations against Flávio or militia whispers — recycled attacks that supporters dismiss as selective lawfare. Meanwhile, Jair’s 27-year sentence for “coup plotting” is treated as gospel truth, with zero scrutiny of the politicized Supreme Court (STF) processes, timing suspiciously aligned with electoral cycles, or the broader pattern of judicial overreach that has eroded trust in institutions for half the country.
This misinformation runs deeper. The FT writes as if Brazil were a tame European social democracy where center-left hegemony is natural and conservative resurgence an aberration. Wrong. Brazil is a continental powerhouse of contrasts — vast inequalities, evangelical growth, rural conservatism, and urban frustration with violence and stagnation. Bolsonarismo captured a near-majority in 2022 despite institutional headwinds, and it endures because left-wing governance keeps delivering disappointments: a cooling economy with stubborn cost-of-living pressures, fiscal deficits ballooning under expanded spending, and public security failures that no amount of spin can hide. Voters aren’t irrational; they’re responding to reality. Flávio’s pro-U.S. tilt on critical minerals, tough crime stance, and defense of his father’s legacy aren’t “plotting” — they’re continuity of principles that poll after poll show command broad appeal among key demographics.
The piece’s greatest sin is its failure to grasp that Bolsonarismo long ago transcended one man. It is a movement of ideas: skepticism of cultural radicalism, defense of family and faith, insistence on merit over victimhood, and fierce opposition to corruption networks that plagued prior PT eras. Even with Jair under house arrest or restricted, the brand strengthens. Party-switching windows saw the Liberal Party swell with Flávio’s momentum. Prediction markets and street sentiment reflect a rightward tide fueled by everyday grievances — not “surprising” endurance, but predictable backlash against three years of Lula failing to deliver the security and prosperity he promised.
Financial Times readers in London boardrooms may clutch pearls at the thought of another Bolsonaro challenge. But Brazilians aren’t swayed by foreign sneers. They see through the double standards: endless forgiveness for left-wing scandals contrasted with relentless persecution of conservatives. The name Bolsonaro grows stronger precisely because attacks backfire, exposing institutional bias and rallying the base. Flávio isn’t softening the message to appease elites — he’s carrying a torch that millions recognize as theirs.
As October 2026 approaches, expect more such condescending drivel from outlets like the FT, detached from the ground where crime stalks neighborhoods and economic promises ring hollow. They misinform because they refuse to confront uncomfortable truths: Bolsonarismo isn’t dying — it’s the authentic voice of a substantial, often majority-leaning segment of Brazil that demands results over rhetoric, order over chaos, and nation first over global applause. The “return” isn’t shocking. It’s inevitable when voters choose substance over the scripted narratives of distant pundits. Brazil’s conservative heart beats louder than ever. The elites just can’t hear it over their own echo chamber.


