Two right-leaning leaders in the COVID-19 pandemic: a retrospective assessment of Brazil and Australia

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Palabras clave:

COVID-19, Pandemic Response Plan, Leadership and Governance Capacity, Political Factors, Evidence-Informed Policy, Necropolitics

Resumen

At the outset of the COVID-19 pandemic, Australia and Brazil were led by right-of-center leaders who have each been compared to Donald Trump. Nevertheless, despite their right-leaning political parallels, the pandemic responses of Australia's Scott Morrison and Brazil's Jair Bolsonaro were drastically different. Bolsonaro adopted a strategy characterized by denialism, the promotion of misinformation, and the politicization of healthcare, resulting in some of the world's worst COVID-19 outcomes. Meanwhile, Morrison largely pursued science-backed measures, including early border closures, rigorous quarantine protocols, supporting contact tracing capabilities, and implementing widespread PCR-based testing, which led to relatively low infection and death. This retrospective analysis highlights the significant impact of each right-leaning leaders' choices in navigating public health crises. This reveals that despite prevalent trends, right-of-centre politics can coincide with science-backed public health policy. It also underscores that even moderate adherence to science and responsible health policies can protect lives, regardless of political affiliation.

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Publicado

2025-04-17

Cómo citar

Heslley Machado Silva, & Thomas Aechtner. (2025). Two right-leaning leaders in the COVID-19 pandemic: a retrospective assessment of Brazil and Australia. evista an-Amazônica e aúde, 16(1). ecuperado a partir de https://ojs.iec.gov.br/rpas/article/view/1809

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Artículo de Opinión