Mac Margolis, Columnist

Bolsonaro Celebrates a Coup Brazilians Want to Forget

The country’s military has moved on to better things—like safeguarding its institutional legitimacy.

Brazil’s military treads more carefully these days.

Photographer: AFP/Getty Images

Lock
This article is for subscribers only.

Ever since Jair Bolsonaro won the Brazilian presidency, speculation has swirled around what makes the choleric retired army captain run. No longer: It’s mothballs.

This week, Bolsonaro instructed the nation’s armed forces – to whom he still swoons, though he left their ranks for politics 30 years ago – to commemorate March 31. That’s the date, in 1964, when the military deposed an elected president, seized power and held on for the next 21 years.