Levy Fidelix


José Levy Fidelix da Cruz is a Brazilian conservative politician, businessman and journalist. He is the founder of the Brazilian Labour Renewal Party and ran for president of Brazil in the elections of 2010 and 2014. He is particularly known in Brazil for his promise of building a bullet train system connecting São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro and for his controversial declarations about homosexuals during a political debate in 2014. He has run for several political posts but to date has never won one.

Biography

Fidelix was born in the town of Mutum, Minas Gerais in 1951 to Jarbas Fidelix, a merchant who worked in the field of transportation, and Lecy Araújo, an educator. He moved to Rio de Janeiro, then the capital of Brazil, and studied communication science at the Fluminense Federal University, but he did not graduate. He later became a journalist and professional advertiser. Fidelix is a Roman Catholic.
At the age of 24, he founded the advertising agency Staff Publicidade and also worked as a design director at Art&Som and Vogue Publicidade. As a journalist, he worked for Correio da Manhã and Última Hora, where he revised the Diário Oficial da União.
Fidelix worked for the government as a communications assistant and created Agricultura Urgente, the first national bulletin of agriculture. Through Agricultura Urgente, he launched Brazil's first ecological campaign, which earned him a presidential medal. He co-founded the business magazine Governo e Empresa and the political magazine O Poder. Around 1976, he was the chief communications officer of Estanave, a company related to Petrobras.
In 1982, he founded Interface, the first Brazilian magazine about informatics. In 1983, he moved to São Paulo, where he worked for two years as an anchorman for TV Informátika, a TV program about informatics, in which he interviewed specialists and politicians.

Political career

In 1984, he co-founded the Liberal Party with Álvaro Valle. In 1986, he disputed his first political election, running for State Deputy of São Paulo, and received 735 votes.
He later switched to the Renovator Labour Party and disputed his second election running for Federal Deputy. He received 541 votes.
In 1989 and 1990, he worked as a communications assistant for Fernando Collor's presidential campaign. In 1994, he founded PRTB, his current party, and tried to run for president for the first time but was unable to register. He subsequently ran for Mayor of São Paulo in 1996, Governor of São Paulo in 1998 and 2002, Alderman of São Paulo in 2004, Federal Deputy in 2006 and Mayor of São Paulo in 2008.
In 2010, he ran for president of Brazil for the first time and was the seventh candidate to get the most votes. He ran for Mayor of São Paulo in 2012 and again for President of Brazil in 2014, supporting the Brazilian military dictatorship. He received 446,878 votes and was again the seventh most voted; this was the closest he was in his career to winning an election.

Statements about homosexuals

On September 29, 2014, during a debate among candidates of the 2014 presidential election hosted by RecordTV, Levy Fidelix stated that homosexuals "need psychological care" and were better kept "well away from 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. He was asked to apologize but refused, believing that his statements were not offensive.
Fidelix's statements were condemned by opponents like Jean Wyllys, Marina Silva, Aécio Neves and Dilma Rousseff, as well as organizations such as ABGLT, the Green Party and even the Ministry of Human Rights. On the other hand, other notable conservative politicians, such as Jair Bolsonaro and religious personalities, like Silas Malafaia, declared their support for Fidelix.
On March 13, 2015, São Paulo's Court of Justice fined Fidelix with R$1 million for hate speech in his declarations. The court lifted the fine on February 3, 2017 but imposed a revised fine of R$25,000 on February 22.

Electoral performance

Presidential