, the vice-president
Hamilton Mourão and the President Bolsonaro, June, 2019 Sworn into office in January 2019, President Bolsonaro, a retired captain and notorious supporter of the
military dictatorship, gave the Armed Forces a space unprecedented in federal public administration during post-redemocratization governments. At the same time, the president repeatedly extolled the actions of the military governments, ordering a commemoration of the
1964 coup d'état, stating that "democracy and freedom only exist when Armed Forces want them to" and by continuously attacking the institutions of the Republic, such as the
National Congress and the
Judiciary, which "have resisted the attack, with strong public support." Starting in 2020, as the
COVID-19 pandemic advanced, Bolsonaro adopted a denialist and "chaotic" stance, and was one of the few world leaders to minimize the consequences of the disease. He was against isolation measures adopted by the governors of the states, arguing that they were harmful to the economy, and appealed to the
Supreme Federal Court to overturn them, but the court rejected his claims more than once, in 2020 and 2021, because of the concurrent competence between municipalities, states, and the Union to define policies related to public health provided by the Federal Constitution. In the face of the STF's decisions, Bolsonaro falsely claimed that he could not take any action against the pandemic. In August 2020,
Piauí magazine reported that in May of that year, during one of the worst crises between the Executive and the Judiciary, Bolsonaro wanted to send troops to the STF because he believed the justices were overstepping the line in their decisions and diminishing his authority; the justices would purportedly be replaced. The president eventually gave up on the idea after General
Augusto Heleno published a note critical of the STF. Under the Bolsonaro administration, the budget of the Armed Forces registered a historic high. In the 2019 pension reform, Bolsonaro acted to maintain benefits for the military, such as readjustment and the right to retire with the last salary. In return, the president hoped to garner greater support and loyalty from the military, who were to be directly involved in government policies. In 2021, Bolsonaro started demanding that Army Commander
Edson Pujol have a similar posture to former commander , who criticized the president's political opponents on social networks, such as former president
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Bolsonaro tried to fire Pujol, but Defense Minister
Fernando Azevedo e Silva refused to do so. In March 2021, the pandemic worsened, Bolsonaro's popularity plummeted and rejection of his handling of the pandemic has increased. In the same month, the president questioned, before the Supreme Court, rules restricting the activities decreed by governors, on the grounds that they characterized exceptional measures, such as the
State of Defense and the
State of Siege, which could only be decreed by him. The action was rejected by the highest court. Observing the proposed action, law professor Wallace Corbo opined, "With this action at the STF what he is trying to do is, on the one hand, to remove his responsibility for the state of crisis and, on the other hand, to legitimize his actions should he want to decree a state of siege in the future to contain criticism and contain the opposition." According to reports by military personnel, Bolsonaro proposed to Minister Azevedo e Silva for the Armed Forces to pressure Congress to pass a state of defense measure, an idea that Azevedo e Silva rejected. In March 2021, Bolsonaro denied to the president of the STF,
Luiz Fux, that he intended to decree a state of siege. However, in the same period, President Bolsonaro's office sent a letter to several public agencies to analyze a representation that suggested the declaration of a State of Defense and federal intervention in state governments, supposedly to investigate misappropriation of public resources. The sending of the document was considered "just routine" by presidential aides. ==Events==