
Bolsonaro said that he believed women should be paid less because they get pregnant.

By Joana Midena Perrone
PhD Candidate in Latin American Studies
Oxford University
The Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro is well known for his controversial phrases regarding women and other minorities.
In an interview to RedeTV in 2016, Bolsonaro said that he believed women should be paid less because they get pregnant. News portal G1 has reported on how he has also been condemned by the Supreme Court of Justice for telling a congresswoman that he would not rape her not because of the act itself but becauseshe was โtoo uglyโ.
During the presidential race, women took to the streets to manifest against the then-candidate, using the hashtag #EleNรฃo (#NotHim) in what was considered to be the largest political manifestation of women in Brazil, as reported by BBC Brazil. The protests happened in 114 Brazilian cities, as well as all around the globe and had immense media repercussion.
But what does a Bolsonaro government actually mean for Brazilian women?
Public Policy for Women
Bolsonaro is one of the authors of a law project that revokes the current compulsory treatment of victims of sexual violence by hospitals and clinics, as discussed by revista รpoca. He believes it is part of a plan to legalize abortion in the country. The president-elect also opposes the anti-femicide law sanctioned by former president Dilma Roussef โ according to The Atlantic, he has declared that women should โstop whining; stop with this story of femicideโ.
Bolsonaroโs new Ministry for Women, Family and Human Rights could also represent a step back for womenโs rights and freedoms, especially for the appointment of Damares Alves as miniser. The lawyer and evangelical pastor has declared in a 2016 video published by her church: โIt is time for the church to occupy the nation, to show the nation what the church stands for. It is time for the church to govern.โ

Alves is fiercely anti-abortion and against feminist movements as she believes that those manipulate data on womenโs deaths due to abortion to create a โculture of deathโ, as stated in 2013. In this, she seems to be in line with the new president, who in October declared on Twitter that any proposals to legalise abortion in Brazil would be vetoed and any organisations that supported the cause would not receive federal funding.
A Bolsonarto-Supportive Congress
The 2018 elections have also yielded a good result for conservative politics beyond Bolsonaroโs victory. According to the magazine รpoca, this congress is the most conservative of the last decade โ including a growth in the evangelical caucus. In practice, this means that law projects that were previously unlikely to be approved have gained new life.
This is the case, for example, of the Statute of the Unborn, which grants the right to life from the moment of conception, making abortion illegal in any case. It is also the case of the Statute for the Family, which states that the only legally recognised family is the one formed by a heterosexual partnership and eventual children.
All these circumstances demonstrate that a Bolsonaro government will be damaging to the human rights of women, taking on positions considered to be anti-womenโs rights, especially on issues such as abortion and gender violence.
#NotHim: Women’s Ongoing Resistance
Words in the Bucket reported on Bolsonaroโs unpopularity with women since before the electoral period begun. During the elections, a Facebook group โWomen United Against Bolsonaroโ reached over 2 million members (after the elections, the number has risen to 3.6 million). Along this line, the #NotHim manifestations showcase the large opposition of women towards the new president.

A student active in the #NotHim protests told Words in the Bucket: โIt is hard to say what the new government will mean to women, but the first word that crosses my mind is โsetbackโโ. She also said that while she feels anguished, she has never wanted to fight back this much. โIt is my hope that other women feel like me, and that we are all committed to resist and fightโ, she concludes.
After Bolsonaroโs election, women remain active on social media to discuss ways of keeping up such strong political action. The future of womenโs rights in Brazil seems to be hanging in the balance. But although both the Executive and the Legislative seem to be moving against liberation movements, there is still a lot of resistance from the population.
As reported in The Guardian, marches organised on the 30th of October to reiterate the messages of women and other minorities in the country were attended by thousands of people. On social media, the hashtag #EleNรฃo remains active and has been used to criticise decisions made by the president elect and his future cabinet.
While much remains uncertain, Bolsonaroโs reputation among women does not seem to have changed. Furthermore, it is clear that they will keep on resisting his government in the same way they resisted his election.
Originally published by Words in the Bucket, 11.16.2018, under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International license.
