[ad_1]
Under the leadership of President Michel Temer, who leaves the country in a month, Brazil has once again discreetly participated in the G20 summit that brought together the last two days world leaders in Buenos Aires, the capital. Argentina. .
At the next meeting, to be held in Japan in June, the country will be represented by Jair Bolsonaro, who arrives on the outdoor stage with the legitimacy of the popular vote. For foreign badysts heard by BBC News Brazil, however, the president's strong defense of nationalism and his radical positions on some issues could hamper his ability to save Brazil's international prestige.
Although absent at the Buenos Aires summit, Bolsonaro has already attracted the attention of other leaders. French President Emmanuel Macron said that it was not in his country's interest to sign trade agreements with countries that were not part of the Paris Agreement (a compromise to reduce global warming).
For this reason, he stated that the continuity of negotiations between Mercosur and the European Union will depend on the position of Bolsonaro, which has already expressed its intention to follow the example of the United States and to let the climate deal.
"By the time Bolsonaro heads to his first G20 summit in Osaka, Japan, he may have already learned that his current climate change and gender equality policy would kill Brazilians. And the rest of the world soon after. "John Kirton, director of the G20 research group at the University of Toronto, Canada, told BBC News.
Fear does not stay until the end, again
After having pbaded the lightning strike at the summit of the last year in Germany, the origin of corruption charges. Having threatened his term, Temer held only two bilateral meetings in Buenos Aires with the Australian and Singaporean prime ministers. As in 2017, he left the meeting before the conclusion of the last meeting of the leaders.
His counsel did not clarify the reason for the anticipated return. According to a diplomat from Itamaraty, the president "wanted to arrive earlier in Brazil" and would have a private agenda in São Paulo.
During his tenure of just over two and a half years, Temer had a lower international projection than his predecessors – Fernando Henrique Cardoso (1995-2002), Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (2003-2010) and Dilma Rousseff (2011- 2016).
His last international engagement is expected to be the next Mercosur meeting in Montevideo (Uruguay) on 17 and 18 December. With that, he must complete his term without holding a single bilateral meeting with the leaders of the four major Western powers – the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany and France.