“The Worker's Party sold out the street vendors”: Revanchist populism and the crisis of labor in Belo Horizonte, Brazil

Tipo de Material
Artigo de Periódico
Autor Principal
Nogueira, Mara
Sexo
Mulher
Código de Publicação (ISSN)
2399-6544
Código de Publicação (DOI)
https://doi.org/10.1177/23996544231216890
Título do periódico
Environment & Planning C: Politics & Space
Volume
42
Ano de Publicação
2024
Local da Publicação
Londres
Página Inicial
527
Página Final
543
Idioma
Inglês
Palavras chave
Crisis of labor
populism
street vending
urban policy
urban revitalization
Resumo

In this paper, I examine the links between revanchist populism and the labor crisis in Brazil, a country with a stratified labor market where informality is prevalent among low-income, racialized groups. I analyze the struggles of street vendors for accessing urban space in Belo Horizonte, Brazil, where the Worker’s Party (PT) played a key role in evicting vendors from public spaces and criminalizing their activity in the early 2000s. I focus on the connections between this initiative and a more recent “revitalization” policy that displaced street vendors from public spaces in the city center. In this context, I explore the political discourses of displaced workers during the 2018 elections that brought Bolsonaro to power. I show how the eviction stimulated antipetismo (anti-PT sentiment) among street vendors by triggering collective memories and rage against the party that “sold them out.” I argue that street vendors strongly identify as workers but are excluded from the unionized waged workingmen notion central to unions and Latin American left-wing parties. By discussing how street vendors reiterate their position as workers and not criminals, I highlight their identification with a moral notion of worker aligned with Bolsonaro’s conservative anti-crime agenda. I thus argue that support for Bolsonaro among street vendors was stimulated by the shortcomings of Brazil’s urban reform as well as the lack of appropriate policy responses to an increasingly heterogeneous and informalized workforce. I conclude by emphasizing the importance of supporting the collective struggles of non-waged workers as a path beyond revanchist populism.

Método e Técnica de Pesquisa
Qualitativo
Referência Espacial
Cidade/Município
Belo Horizonte
Macrorregião
Sudeste
Brasil
Habilitado
UF
Minas Gerais
Referência Temporal
2003-2018
Localização Eletrônica
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/epub/10.1177/23996544231216890