A defeated president claims, falsely, that an election was rigged. After months of baseless claims of fraud, an angry mob of his supporters storms Congress. They overwhelm police and vandalize the seat of national government, threatening the countryтАЩs democratic institutions.
Similarities between SundayтАЩs mob violence in Brazil and the attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, are self-evident: Jair Bolsonaro, the right-wing former president of Brazil, had for months sought to undermine the results of an election that he lost, in much the same manner that Donald J. Trump did after his defeat in the 2020 presidential election. Trump allies who had helped spread falsehoods about the 2020 election have turned to sowing doubt in the results of BrazilтАЩs presidential election in October.
Those efforts by Mr. Bolsonaro and his allies have now culminated in an attempt тАФ however implausible тАФ to overturn the results of BrazilтАЩs election and restore the former president to power. In much the same manner as Jan. 6, the mob that descended on the Brazilian capital overpowered police at the perimeter of the building that houses Congress and swept into the halls of power тАФ breaking windows, taking valuable items and posing for photos in abandoned legislative chambers.
But Luiz In├бcio Lula da Silva, the new president of Brazil, was sworn into office more than a week ago. The results of the presidential election have been certified by the countryтАЩs electoral court, not its legislature. There was no official proceeding to disrupt on Sunday, and the Brazilian Congress was not in session.
The mob violence on Jan. 6, 2021, тАЬwent right to the heart of the changing government,тАЭ and the attack in Brazil is not тАЬas heavily weighted with that kind of symbolism,тАЭ said Carl Tobias, a professor of constitutional law at the University of Richmond.
Nevertheless, the riot in Bras├нlia drew widespread condemnation, including from U.S. lawmakers, with many Democrats drawing comparisons between it and the storming of the U.S. Capitol.
тАЬDemocracies of the world must act fast to make clear there will be no support for right-wing insurrectionists storming the Brazilian Congress,тАЭ Representative Jamie Raskin wrote on Twitter. тАЬThese fascists modeling themselves after TrumpтАЩs Jan. 6 rioters must end up in the same place: prison.тАЭ
Representative George Santos, a Republican from New York under criminal investigation by Brazilian authorities, appeared to be one of the first elected officials from his party to condemn the mob violence in a post on Twitter on Sunday, but he did not draw a connection to Jan. 6.
Many of the lawmakers who condemned the violence had lived through the attack on the Capitol that occurred just over two years ago. Mr. Raskin was the lead impeachment manager in Mr. TrumpтАЩs second impeachment trial over his role in inciting the mob.
In a final echo of the Jan. 6 attack on Sunday, hours after the riot in Brazil began, Mr. Bolsonaro posted a message on social media calling for peace, much the way Mr. Trump did. Authorities had already announced they had the situation under control.