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Tag: Lula

  • Contributor: How the conviction of Brazil’s former president echoes in the U.S.

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    Brazil’s Supreme Court on Thursday found former President Jair Bolsonaro guilty of conspiracies related to his failed 2022 reelection bid. The court found that Bolsonaro tried to instigate a military coup and to poison his opponent, current President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Bolsonaro, the former president of Latin America’s largest democracy and its wealthiest country, was sentenced to more than 27 years in prison and is barred from ever seeking public office again.

    Bolsonaro is one among two dozen elected presidents and prime ministers in recent history around the world who used their time in office to undermine their countries’ democratic institutions. In addition to undermining confidence in elections, the Brazilian leader weakened public and scientific institutions by defunding them. Bolsonaro’s family and political associates faced repeated scandals. As a consequence, the president governed in constant fear of impeachment — a fate that had ended the careers of two prior Brazilian presidents since the country’s return to democracy in 1998. To avoid this outcome, Bolsonaro forged alliances with an array of legislative parties and strange bedfellows. Brazilian political scientists describe the implicit agreement: “The deal is simple: you protect me and I let you run the Country and extract rents from it as you wish.”

    Curiously, the decision is also a setback for President Trump here in the United States. Trump views Bolsonaro as an ally who, like him, has been persecuted by leftists and subjected to retribution by courts. The American president tried hard to stop the Brazilian court from ruling against Bolsonaro. In August, Trump sent a letter to Lula, Bolsonaro’s nemesis. Trump threatened to hike most tariffs on Brazilian exports to the U.S. to 50% should his friend remain in legal peril.

    Trump’s empathy reflects the two presidents’ parallel paths. Bolsonaro, like Trump, used his time in office to test democratic norms, weaken independent public institutions and vilify his opponents. Both men express a taste for political violence. Where Trump has often mused about beating up hecklers and shooting protesters in the knees, Bolsonaro was nostalgic for military rule in his country. On the campaign trail in 2018, he asserted that Brazil would only change for the better “on the day that we break out in civil war here and do the job that the military regime didn’t do: killing 30,000.”

    Both Trump and Bolsonaro tried to cling to power after losing their reelection bids. Heeding their presidents’ claims of electoral fraud, Trump’s supporters rioted in Washington on Jan. 6, 2021, as did Bolsonaro’s in Brasilia, the Brazilian capital, on Jan. 8, 2023. Bolsonaro’s involvement in these post-election acts was the basis of the legal peril that has consumed him.

    Trump depicts the Brazilian judge most responsible for Bolsonaro’s prosecution, Chief Justice Alexandre de Moraes, with disdain. Trump describes the case against Bolsonaro as a “witch hunt” in support of a Lula government, describing the current president as a “radical leftist.”

    In fact there is little love lost between Lula and De Moraes. Lula is the leader of the social-democratic Workers’ Party; De Moraes is closely associated with the center-right PSDB and is known for his tough-on-crime stances. De Moraes’ activism dates back to the Bolsonaro presidency, when Brazil’s attorney general, appointed by Bolsonaro, was less than energetic in upholding the rule of law. To transpose the Brazilian situation and De Moraes’ activism to the U.S. context, imagine that, viewing the Justice Department’s lack of vigor in prosecuting Trump, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. had roused himself to encourage legal action against the president.

    Many Americans will view Brazil and the Bolsonaro story with a certain envy. Here is a president who dealt with electoral loss by claiming fraud and by instigating his military and civilian supporters to violence, and who has been held decisively to account.

    Accountability of public servants is at the heart of democracy. Voters can hold incumbents accountable in elections — political scientists call this “vertical accountability” — as can coequal branches of government, which we call “horizontal accountability.” Would-be autocratic leaders such as Bolsonaro try to escape both kinds of accountability, staying in office even when they lose (the end of vertical accountability) and undermining independent courts, agencies, central banks and whistle-blowers (there goes the horizontal version). In the end, Bolsonaro was held to account both by voters and by the courts.

    Trump’s self-insertion into the Bolsonaro prosecution calls attention to another form of accountability, or at least presidential constraint, which has gone missing from our own governing administration. That is the constraint that presidents experience when advisors keep them from acting on instincts that are unwise.

    If such advisors were to be found in today’s White House, they might have counseled the president not to threaten Brazil with high tariffs. Doing so risks exacerbating inflation of the prices of key consumer goods (coffee, orange juice), something that is politically dangerous because controlling inflation was an issue at the heart of Trump’s 2024 reelection campaign. The use of tariff threats as a cudgel to try to save an ally from legal peril also gives lie to the purported rationale behind tariffs: protecting U.S. manufacturers or correcting trade imbalances.

    Gone, then, are the days when Americans might have served as a model of democratic governance. For all of its own problems, of which there are many, the second-largest country in our hemisphere is schooling us in what democratic accountability looks like.

    Susan Stokes is a professor of political science at the University of Chicago and faculty director of the Chicago Center on Democracy. She is the author, most recently, of “The Backsliders: Why Leaders Undermine Their Own Democracies.”

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    Susan Stokes

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  • Lula Cafe Will Celebrate 25 Years in Logan Square With Star-Studded Pop-Up Series

    Lula Cafe Will Celebrate 25 Years in Logan Square With Star-Studded Pop-Up Series

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    The summer season kicked off with a bang for chef Jason Hammel, who in June took home a James Beard Award for Outstanding Hospitality at his iconic 25-year-old farm-to-table restaurant Lula Cafe in Logan Square. It was the sole medal awarded to a Chicago restaurant this year, but Chicagoans’ outpouring of joy over the win has taken Lula Cafe to new heights of popularity.

    Rather than resting on his laurels, Hammel and his wife, singer and songwriter Amalea Tshilds, are preparing to unveil their hotly anticipated new project, Loulou. Located a short walk from Lula in the long and narrow former home of Mini Mott and Second Generation at 3057 W. Logan Boulevard, Loulou won’t be a traditional restaurant, Hammel says. The couple have long dreamed of a space that blends food with other art forms like literature and music, where they can host pop-ups, special meals, chef and vendor panels, and other gatherings.

    Lula has been a linchpin in the community since ’90s and used to host similar events several nights a week. Hammel admits there was some fear when retail chains and others began arriving along Logan Boulevard, but the neighborhood has kept its spirit. “Logan Square remains fiercely independent. owner-operated, and new things are opening all the time,” Hammel said during a June interview with Eater.

    Loulou marks a bit of a return to those roots with performers and visiting chefs holding court while the kitchen prepares food based on the event. “That’s why we’ve been thriving for 25 years, because we really care about the stories and the depth of experience,” he added. “We want to do that for the public [at Loulou].”

    Now, as the opening approaches, Hammel and Tshilds are setting the stage for future collaborations with 25 for 25, a series of five pop-up dinners featuring some of the city’s most celebrated chefs to raise funds for local nonprofits. Slated to run over the five days leading up to Lula Cafe’s 25th anniversary – Monday, August 26, through Saturday, August 31 – the Resy-sponsored events will feature a distinct menu with a portion of proceeds from the $250 per person tickets going to a different charitable organization.

    Check out the lineup below.


    Monday, August 26

    Chefs: Erick Williams (Virtue), Lee Wolen (Boka), Jonathan Zaragoza (Birrieria Zaragoza), Paul Virant (Gaijin), and Stephanie Izard (Girl & the Goat).

    Menu items: Wolen’s bluefin tuna marinated in strawberry, black garlic, and tomato; and Zaragoza’s smoked potato taco with ceviche a la Mexicana, jocque, salsa roja, and peanut salsa matcha.

    Charity: Virtue Leadership Development Program

    Tickets available via Resy.

    Wednesday, August 28

    Chefs: John Shields (Smyth, the Loyalist), Sarah Stegner (Prairie Grass Cafe), Giuseppe Tentori (GT Prime), Sarah Gruenberg (Monteverde), Joe Frillman (Daisies) and Leigh Omilinsky (Daisies).

    Menu item: Tentori’s wagyu beef with miso pomme puree and fennel.

    Charity: The Evolved Network

    Tickets available via Resy.

    Thursday, August 29

    Chefs: Jason Vincent (Giant, Chef’s Special Cocktail Bar), David Posey (Elske), Anna Posey (Elske), John Manion (El Che, Brasero), Diana Dávila (Mi Tocaya Antojería), and Sandra Holl (Floriole).

    Menu items: Vincent’s eggplant lahmacun with phyllo, tomato, onion, parsley, and grated bresaola; David and Anna Posey’s cured tuna with smoked tomato, sunflower, and marigold.

    Charity: The Abundance Setting

    Tickets available via Resy.

    Friday, August 30

    Chefs: Carrie Nahabedian (Brindille), Joe Flamm (Rose Mary), Paul Kahan (The Publican, Avec), Oliver Poilevey (Le Bouchon, Obilex), and Mindy Segal (Mindy’s Bakery).

    Menu items: Flamm’s rabbit mortadella tortellini in brodo; Segal’s Ode to Lula carrot cake.

    Charity: Impact Culinary Fund

    Tickets available via Resy.

    Saturday, August 31

    Chefs: Matthias Merges (Mordecai, Billy Sunday), Rick Bayless (Frontera Grill, Topolobampo), Zach Engel (Galit), Andrew Zimmerman (Sepia, Proxi), Tim Flores (Kasama), and Genie Kwon (Kasama).

    Menu items: Bayless’ camote blanco tamal with Oaxacan green mole, confit fennel, and grilled chayote; Engel’s cucumber salad with melon, ramps, shmaltz, gribenes, and kaluga caviar.

    Charity: Pilot Light

    Tickets available via Resy.

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    Naomi Waxman

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  • Lula Cafe Wins Chicago’s Only James Beard Award

    Lula Cafe Wins Chicago’s Only James Beard Award

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    After years of near-misses in various categories, Chicago’s 25-year-old farm-to-table icon Lula Cafe took home the 2024 James Beard Award for Outstanding Hospitality — not to mention the only Beard medal staying put this year in the Windy City.

    The James Beard Foundation Awards, one of the highest honors for hospitality professionals in the U.S. — known to many as the Oscars of the restaurant industry — returned Monday evening to the Lyric Opera of Chicago. The annual black-tie gala is a special opportunity for chefs, bartenders, bakers, and restaurateurs to see and be seen by their peers and make strong sartorial choices to show off their personalities on the red carpet.

    Founded in 1999 by chef Jason Hammel, all-day favorite Lula Cafe is a cherished neighborhood institution and welcoming haven for new American cuisine. It’s been a long haul to the Beards stage for Hammel, who was a nominee for Best Chef: Great Lakes in 2019, 2020, and 2022. The restaurant has earned legions of fans not only for its food and wine but also for its emphasis on the well-being of its workers and community.

    Lula Cafe chef and owner Jason Hammel (center left) and his family.
    Barry Brecheisen/Eater Chicago

    “We truly believe at Lula that hospitality is love and it’s a love with conditions, and we believe the conditions can be just and fair and kind,” Hammel said in his acceptance speech. “I hope that everyone… especially those with power will enact policies that protect and ensure that these conditions can be met and maintained for everyone.”

    It was a tough evening for Chicago, which began the night with a formidable clutch of four finalists. In a significant upset, chef Hajime Sato of Sozai in Clawson, Michigan, took home the award for Best Chef: Great Lakes, beating out Chicago nominees Sujan Sarkar of Indian tasting menu spot Indienne and Jenner Tomaska of artsy avant-garde destination Esmé. It’s the first time Chicago has fallen short in the category since 2015, when it was bestowed on chef Johnathon Sawyer, then of the Greenhouse Tavern in Cleveland (he has since relocated to — surprise — Chicago, where he helms Kindling inside Willis Tower).

    In what proved a prescient moment before the ceremony began, Tomaska endorsed a notion that Chicago’s hospitality community has pondered for several years. The Foundation, he argued, should break out the Windy City into a separate regional category: “There’s a long list of chefs that I really respect that haven’t had a win,” Tomaska says. “I’m humbled to be recognized in this category, but I think Chicago is a staple and we often get [overlooked].”

    This year, many embraced the glitz of the occasion, shimmering through the media gauntlet in sequins, glitter, stones, metallics, and other shiny eye-catching designs. Celebrity chef Art Smith walked the carpet in a peacock green silk jacket adorned with a snarling dog made of crystals (the logo of his newish collaborators at professional rugby team the Chicago Hounds); James Beard Award-winning chef Sarah Grueneberg opted for a slightly more subtle sparkle on the bodice of her black dress, paired to great effect with bold red lips and statement earrings reminiscent of angel wings.

    Art Smith and Jesus Salgueiro walk with two dogs on the red carpet.

    Celebrity chef Art Smith (right) and husband Jesus Salgueiro.
    Barry Brecheisen/Eater Chicago

    Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson also returned for his second Beards gala, following the tradition set by his predecessors Lori Lightfoot and Rahm Emanuel. In addition to thanking the Foundation for holding the gala in “the greatest freaking city in the world,” Johnson ribbed ceremony co-host Marcus Samuelsson for multiple shoutouts to New York City earlier in the evening. “Marcus, don’t you mention that other city any more times tonight,” he intoned. The gala will remain in Chicago until at least 2027.

    Despite the splashy fanfare, however, the Foundation is still finding its footing after several years of controversy which cast a pall over the affair. The 2024 awards mark its third ceremony following an extensive audit that resulted in new key protocols designed to make the institution more self-aware, transparent, and diverse. Last year, the drama centered around the Foundation’s attempts to investigate nominees accused of being bad actors (as dictated in said audit), a procedure that rapidly proved to be complex, challenging, and mostly conducted away from public scrutiny. Ultimately, one chef was disqualified from winning the category he was nominated in and at least two judges quit over the Foundation’s decision.

    A full list of awards is available on Eater.

    Disclosure: Some Vox Media staff members are part of the voting body for the James Beard Awards. Eater is partnering with the James Beard Foundation to livestream the awards in 2024. All editorial content is produced independently of the James Beard Foundation.

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    Naomi Waxman

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  • Bolsonaro Privately Admits Brazil’s Election ‘Over’—But Still Hasn’t Conceded

    Bolsonaro Privately Admits Brazil’s Election ‘Over’—But Still Hasn’t Conceded

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    Topline

    Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro told the country’s Supreme Court in a private meeting on Wednesday the election is “over,” multiple outlets reported—the closest the right-wing president has come to admitting defeat, amid speculation that Bolsonaro, who repeatedly cast doubt on election integrity, could fight its results.

    Key Facts

    Luiz Edson Fachin, a justice on Brazil’s Supreme Court, said in a video broadcast with local outlets that Bolsonaro privately told him the election is over, “so let’s look ahead.”

    Bolsonaro’s comments come two days after the one-term president was narrowly defeated by left-wing challenger Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva 50.9% to 49.1% in a high-profile presidential election, following months of baseless claims from Bolsonaro and his right-wing Liberal Party that the election would likely be mired in fraud and that election officials could easily tamper with voting machines.

    Some of Bolsonaro’s supporters have taken to nationwide protests following the results of the elections on Sunday, with a group of truckers blocking Brazil’s highways at 271 points and some of his most vocal supporters calling on the military to keep him in office.

    Most of his political allies, however, have pushed him to recognize his defeat, while his administration reportedly signaled it will proceed with the transition of power to Lula, with Vice President Hamilton Mourão admitting in an interview with Brazilian outlet O Globo, “we lost the game.”

    In a speech on Tuesday, Bolsonaro said he has “always played within the four lines of the constitution”—although he stopped short of publicly conceding, and called the highway protests a response to “indignation and a sense of injustice.”

    Key Background

    Bolsonaro, nicknamed the “Trump of the Tropics,” has spewed baseless conspiracies that the elections would be tampered with for months leading up to Sunday’s election. In September, members of his party shared a document supporting the unsubstantiated claim that government employees have the “absolute power” to change the results of an election “without leaving a trace.” The country’s electoral authority denied the allegations as “false and untrue,” with no “support in reality.” Bolsonaro’s son echoed those fears last week, saying his father was the victim of the “greatest election fraud ever seen.”

    Tangent

    Bolsonaro, a key ally of former President Donald Trump, pulled a play out of Trump’s playbook to spread doubt around election fraud before voting took place. Bolsonaro, however, has not claimed the election was stolen from him, as Trump did after the 2020 election—a claim that led to the January 6 insurrection at Capitol Hill, with rioters aiming to disrupt the congressional approval process of the election results. Before the election on Sunday, Trump said “don’t let the Radical Left Lunatics and Maniacs destroy Brazil like they have so many other countries.”

    News Peg

    Lula, in a victory speech on Sunday, called the result a “victory of a democratic movement,” while world leaders congratulated him, with President Joe Biden calling the elections “free, fair and credible.” Lula, 77, previously served as Brazil’s president from 2003-2010, but had his 2018 hopes of running again stymied after he was jailed on corruption charges—which were overturned by the Supreme Court last year, after he served 19 months in jail. He has run on a platform of reducing deforestation in the Amazon that was accelerated by Bolsonaro, and of lifting the country’s economic spending cap, in a move aimed at promoting economic growth.

    Further Reading

    Brazil Election: Left-Wing Lula Narrowly Beats Bolsonaro To Return To Presidency (Forbes)

    Bolsonaro Won’t Contest Election Defeat To Lula, Minister Says, Amid Growing Tensions (Forbes)

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    Brian Bushard, Forbes Staff

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  • China’s Xi Jinping congratulates Lula on Brazil election win

    China’s Xi Jinping congratulates Lula on Brazil election win

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    Chinese President Xi Jinping on Monday congratulated Luis Inacio Lula da Silva for his win in Brazil’s presidential election, according to state broadcaster CCTV.

    “I attach great importance to the development of China-Brazil relations,” said Xi.

    “I am willing to work with President-elect Lula, from a strategic and long-term perspective, to jointly plan and promote to a new level the comprehensive strategic partnership between China and Brazil, for the benefit of the two countries and its peoples.”

    Relations between China and Brazil, two of the world’s largest developing countries, worsened under right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro, who has not conceded the election yet.

    Leftist Lula, previously a two-term president, led Brazil into the first BRICS grouping in 2009, initially made up of Brazil, Russia, India, and China, before South Africa joined in 2010.

    Lula last year praised China and its response to the COVID-19 pandemic in an interview with a Chinese media outlet, contrasting the strength of the ruling Communist Party to what he called the “weakening of the state” in Latin American and developing world countries.
     

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  • Left-Wing Leader Lula Narrowly Beats Bolsonaro In Brazil’s Presidential Election

    Left-Wing Leader Lula Narrowly Beats Bolsonaro In Brazil’s Presidential Election

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    Topline

    Leftist Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva defeated incumbent Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil’s presidential elections by a slim margin of less than two points on Sunday, a result which is yet to be accepted by the far-right leader who has previously made unproven allegations of electoral fraud.

    Key Facts

    With all votes counted, da Silva—widely known as Lula—secured 50.9% of the votes compared to Bolsonaro’s 49.1%, winning by a margin of around 2 million votes.

    In his victory speech delivered in Sao Paulo, Lula called the result a “victory of a democratic movement,” as he vowed to govern for all Brazilians “not just for those who voted for me.”

    Bolsonaro, who has repeatedly made unsubstantiated claims about election fraud and voting machine manipulation had not officially conceded defeat at the time of publishing.

    According to Reuters, Bolsonaro is not expected to make any public remarks about results until Monday morning.

    President Joe Biden joined several other world leaders to congratulate Lula for his victory following “free, fair, and credible elections” adding that he looked forward to building cooperation between the U.S. and Brazil.

    Surprising Fact

    Bolsonaro is the first president to not win reelection since the reinstatement of democracy in Brazil in 1985.

    Key Background

    Lula’s win caps off a spectacular comeback for the 77-year-old leftist leader who was unable to run against Bolsonaro in 2018 after being jailed on corruption charges. After spending 19 months in jail Lula’s conviction was overturned by Brazil’s Supreme Court. Lula previously served as Brazil’s President from 2003 to 2010 during which he oversaw a massive economic boom and helped build Brazil’s social welfare system. Like his previous stint in the 2000s, Lula’s victory coincided with a series of other left-wing victories across Latin America dubbed as the “pink tide.” In the past few years, Colombia, Mexico, Argentina, Chile and Peru have also elected left-wing leaders to the nation’s top office.

    News Peg

    In the lead up to one of the most divisive elections in the region, Bolsonaro pulled a page from former U.S. President Donald Trump’s playbook by preemptively questioning the integrity of the elections during his campaign. Without any evidence, the far-right leader has repeatedly claimed that the country’s electronic voting machines could be easily manipulated to alter the results. Last week, Bolsonaro’s son said his father was the victim of “the greatest electoral fraud ever seen” fanning further fears that he may question the outcome if he loses. Despite raising concerns about a blockade by Brazil’s Federal Highway Police which may have impeded Lula’s voters earlier on Sunday, international election observers were satisfied by the integrity of the elections.

    Further Reading

    Lula defeats Bolsonaro to again become Brazil’s president (Associated Press)

    Brazil Ejects Bolsonaro and Brings Back Former Leftist Leader Lula (New York Times)

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    Siladitya Ray, Forbes Staff

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  • As Dilma Rousseff Struggles to Save Her Career, an American Author Worries About Brazil’s Smartest Woman

    As Dilma Rousseff Struggles to Save Her Career, an American Author Worries About Brazil’s Smartest Woman

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    Book News: For Steven Carter, the current political turmoil in Brazil is an opportunity to re-focus his writing, and dedicate his new book to President Dilma Rousseff.

    Press Release



    updated: May 2, 2016

    ​​​​​​​Steven Carter never expected his writing would bring him face to face with the president of Brazil.  And, flipping through a copy of “What Smart Women Know” at a local bookstore, a typical reader wouldn’t know they are reading one of the most successful American books ever published in Brazil.  “What Smart Women Know” soared to the top of Brazil’s bestseller lists in 2008 and held its place for 110  weeks — regularly holding the #2 position — joined later by its celebrated sequel, “Men Like Women Who Like Themselves.”  Brazil was changing quickly, and the women of Brazil were embracing that change.

    For American author Steven Carter, those were dizzying times. First came the highly publicized appearances at the Bienal do Livro. Traveling from city to city, often talking to sold-out crowds, he met Brazil’s most revered authors and artists. He viewed the panoramas of Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paolo with Marcos and Tomas Pereira, founders of the publishing giant Editora Sextante.  And twice each year he would return to Brazil, ultimately joining President Dilma Rousseff at the Rio Bienal to celebrate the ‘Year of the Woman.’

    It was all very heady stuff, often thrilling.  “Rousseff was smart, powerful and inspiring,” Carter recalls. “Meeting President Rousseff reignited my passion for writing.”  After their meeting, more books would follow.  “I feel I owe her so much,” he added, “and today I have the chance to thank her in my work.”

    As new titles were released, international praise for Steven Carter’s work kept building. But after five years of uninterrupted success, the world suddenly turned, leaving Carter to helplessly watch the Brazilian juggernaut stall. As Brazil’s economy slumped, book sales faltered.  “I could feel the might of Brazil begin to disappear,” Carter remembers. “I feared the need for a scapegoat — economic decline is a bitter pill.”

    Back in the United States now, Carter worries about Rousseff’s future — he knows too well from his research and writing the risks and rewards of being a strong, smart woman.  He also wonders if there will ever be another “Brazil Story” in his lifetime. Will there ever be another great nation with an emerging middle class filled with working women who eagerly embrace his message? The author watches and laments as Dilma Rousseff struggles to hold on to her power and her position. Within the pages of “What Smart Women Know” there is a gentle wisdom that seems to predict the fate of successful women who have the courage to lead.

    Today, on his cluttered desk, there sits a copy of “Love & Self-Esteem:  What the Smartest Women Know.”  Steven Carter hopes that this book — a book inspired by the smart women of Brazil, and now dedicated to their leader — will soon find a new audience, even if that audience is far from his home in Los Angeles.
     

    Source: C.A.S. Publishing

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