Brazilian Labour Renewal Party

The PRTB, together with the PRN, formed the Renova Brasil (Renew Brazil) coalition, in support of the former President of the Republic.

[12] In 2006, the party gained electoral importance because of the election of ex-President Fernando Collor de Mello, impeached in 1992,[13] who made his comeback in national politics as a Senator.

Governalism proposes overcoming the country's current polarization, where, according to the author himself, capitalist (right) and socialist (left) ideas have limitations and cause "national division between two extremes, leading Brazilians to see each other as enemies simply because they think differently.

The influencer argues that this division, which began in the French Revolution, hinders "the nation's progress towards sustainable development and prosperity".

The party has been accused of having links with neo-Nazi and neo-fascist organizations and promoting fake news and conspiracy theories on the internet.

[27] During the 2014 Brazilian general election, the party leader and candidate Levy Fidelix during a debate made a statement that homosexuals “need psychological care” and were better kept “well away from [the rest of] us."

He also said that Brazil’s population of 200 million would be reduced by half if homosexuality were encouraged because “the excretory system” does not function as a means of reproduction.