Porto Alegre, Brazil
Friday Night
The highpoint of this year's World Social Forum was reached earlier this evening when newly elected Brazilian president Luiz Ignacio "Lula" Da Silva showed up to address an outdoor crowd of as many as 75,000 cheering supporters. Accompanied by seventeen of his cabinet ministers, this was the socialist president's first visit to this city of 1.2 million since he formally took office on January 1.
-
GOP Clutches at Iowa Straws
Marc Cooper: The Iowa straw poll offered a penetrating glimpse into the crisis facing the Republican party.
-
Laboring for Edwards
Marc Cooper: John Edwards is meticulously laying the groundwork to become the candidate of organized labor, insisting prosperity can expand only if unionization expands.
-
Betting on Healthcare
Marc Cooper: At a union-sponsored forum in Las Vegas, John Edwards presented a real healthcare plan, but Hillary Clinton captured the crowd.
-
Lockdown in Greeley
Marc Cooper: A recent police raid on a small-city factory showcases the Bush Administration's frightening war on illegal immigration.
-
The Press and the Watada Trial
Marc Cooper: Also at stake in the trial of an Army officer who refuses to deploy to Iraq is the independence of the press.
-
Lt. Ehren Watada: Resister
Marc Cooper: Facing a showdown court-martial for refusing to serve in an illegal and unjust war, Lieut. Ehren Watada has become a flashpoint for the antiwar movement.
-
About Face
Marc Cooper: In the most significant movement of dissident soldiers since Vietnam, nearly 1,000 active-duty officers and enlisted personnel have petitioned the government to withdraw from Iraq.
Lula, who as a child worked as a bootblack, dropped out of school, and then as a metal worker led strikes against Brazil's military dictatorship, went on to found the leftist Workers Party in 1979--a unique amalgam of Marxist, Trotskyist, Catholic and democratic populist currents. Last fall he was elected President with a resounding 61 percent of the votes.
Speaking in a simple, conversational style, he told his crowd of supporters tonight that his new government was committed to reforming a "global economic system in which some people eat five times a day and others eat only once every five days." At one point in his speech when referring to children who go hungry at night, the new Brazilian president's voice wavered on tears.
Openly recognizing that Brazil is saddled with crushing debt and onerous obligations to international financial institutions like the IMF, Lula said that while he "would not cede an inch" on his campaign promises of reform, progress would nevertheless be achieved "cautiously." There was a smattering of hisses from the radical fringes of the crowd when he pronounced that word--but they were drowned out by thousands who throatily roared the trademark sing-song slogan "Olé! Olé! Ola! Lu-La! Lu-La!"
Lula's popularity is downright contagious in Brazil: Latin America's most powerful economy but one of the most unequal societies in the world. Lula is the first President in Brazilian history who looks, talks and indeed is of the bottom half of the population. All around the Port Do Sol amphitheater where he appeared tonight, a crop of what you might call "Lula Stores" mushroomed, busily selling Lula T-shirts, Lula calendars, Lula key chains, even Lula mouse pads, as well as stacks of the Workers Party red-and-gold flags.
"I know that my election has raised hopes not only among you, but also among the entire international left," Lula said in conclusion, "and that makes me even more aware of the heavy responsibilities I now bear." As Lula was finishing his half-hour speech, the crowd began to shout "Fica! Fica!" Stay! Stay! I'd love to see an American presidential candidate pull that off on the stump.
Earlier in the day thousands of delegates attended the first full day of the third annual World Social Forum crowding into a panoply of dozens--more like scores--of conferences, panel discussions, workshops and lectures on just about every imaginable aspect of globalization. With the threat of imminent war in Iraq weighing heavily over the conference, the most heavily attended events were those that focused on militarization. Thousands jammed into a local arena to hear speakers like author Tariq Ali analyze the Bush Administration's plans for the Middle East.
In another roundtable discussion, international trade activists, including Martin Khor of Malaysia and Lori Wallach of Public Citizen, outlined the high stakes in play at the next ministerial meeting of the World Trade Organization, scheduled to take place this September in Cancun, Mexico. Over the next few days activists and organizers here will be informally networking, developing joint plans for mass demonstrations against the WTO meeting as well as strategies for opposing the looming Free Trade Area of the Americas--the continent-wide trade pact being pushed by the Bush White House.
Indeed, Porto Alegre the week of the World Social Forum becomes a heaven-on-earth for political networkers of every stripe. With 29,000 delegates in town from all over the world, and three times that number of "participants," onlookers and political tourists, it's virtually impossible to escape the activist buzz. Today during a brief time-out I took in my hotel bar, I had former French First Lady Danielle Mitterrand and legendary McDonalds-masher José Bové sitting at the table to the right of me, the former president of the Brazilian central trade union federation to my left and a radical Spanish mayor in front of me. Whom to talk to first?
- Get The Nation at home (and online!) for 75 cents a week!
- If you like this article, consider making a donation to The Nation.

Buzzflash
del.icio.us
Digg
Facebook
Newsvine
Reddit