Wyllys was born in
Alagoinhas, in the northeastern state of
Bahia, one of seven children. His election was only possible, considering the number of votes he had in 2010 elections, through the so-called "voto de legenda" (party vote), a constitutional mechanism that allows candidates who do not have a large number of votes to be elected through votes of another highly voted candidate of the same party. In Wyllys's case, the votes of another congressman of
Socialism and Liberty Party, Chico Alencar, who was one of the most voted in
Rio de Janeiro, helped in his election. Upon occupying a seat in Congress, Wyllys brought his
LGBT movement activism to the scene. He started working on his political platform, which was primarily focused on the fight for
LGBT rights. In so doing, he ended up confronting prominent Brazilian right-wing figures, such as pastor
Silas Malafaia, a famous televangelist and national president of the
Assembly of God Churches, and
Jair Bolsonaro, a congressman (later elected president) who became Wyllys's nemesis in the Brazilian Congress. Wyllys at one point spat at congressman Bolsonaro during the voting of President
Dilma Rousseff's
impeachment. In Congress, he proposed three controversial pieces of legislation, including the regulation of prostitution, the legalization and government regulation of marijuana production, and the government financing of
sex reassignment surgeries and
hormonal treatment for
transgender teenagers and adults. Wyllys' defense of
minority rights and his existence as an
openly gay Congress member and human rights activist have made him a public enemy of conservative political forces in Brazil. Living in a country with such a high rate of homophobic crimes as Brazil, Wyllys began to receive
death threats. These became more recurrent after his political enemies began a campaign against him by posting and sharing in social media, including Facebook, images with quotes attributed to him, portraying him as being openly a paedophile. Among other remarks falsely attributed to him was one which stated that the Bible was "a joke" and that Christians and Bible followers were "clowns." This was widely circulated. Nevertheless, people in social networks still shared them, strengthening the ongoing hate campaign against Wyllys. To repair his image damaged by the orchestrated campaign, he created a section on his official webpage where he refutes all the quotes attributed to him. Although his political image in the public sphere had been tarnished by the slanderous campaign, Wyllys ran for congress once again in 2014 and kept his seat in parliament with more than 100,000 votes, receiving the seventh most votes among representatives from Rio de Janeiro.
(left), Wyllys
(middle), and
Paulo Pimenta (right) at the
Palácio do Planalto, 2023. In 2015, it was announced that Brazilian independent filmmakers were planning to produce a documentary about Wyllys's political career and activism. The documentary was released in 2016 with the title "Entre os Homens de Bem" (Among Virtuous Men). The documentary focuses on the political arena in Brazil and addresses topics such as
gay marriage and LGBT rights, and features Wyllys and his conservative opponents.
Resignation Wyllys was re-elected to a third term as a member of Congress in the
2018 election. However, the campaign took a toll on him. His close friend, Rio de Janeiro city councillor
Marielle Franco, was fatally shot in March 2018. In January 2019, just days before the February 1 swearing-in of the
56th Congress, Wyllys released a note from overseas stating that he would not return to Brazil due to alleged death threats and that he would not assume his position as congressman. He told the
Folha de São Paulo newspaper that he did not want to live four years under close security watch. He was replaced in the Chamber of Deputies by
David Miranda. Soon after news of Wyllys' resignation broke, President Bolsonaro reacted on Twitter, by posting the phrase "Great day" followed by a "
thumbs-up" emoji. His son,
Carlos Bolsonaro, also tweeted: "Godspeed and be happy". He returned to Brazil for the first time in July 2023. In May 2024, he called for Lula to not run for a fourth term in 2026, instead endorsing
Simone Tebet as a potential successor. ==Notes==