The Brazilian political landscape has undergone profound structural transformations over the past decade. This paper examines three interconnected phenomena observed in contemporary Brazilian democracy: (1) the growing ideological and cultural disconnection between left-wing parties—particularly the Workers' Party (PT)—and the working-class electorate they historically represented; (2) the consolidation of a pragmatic and electorally agile right-wing bloc that has capitalized on the left’s perceived elitism and academic insularity; and (3) the emergence of a gender-based ideological divergence, in which younger women increasingly align with progressive politics while younger men gravitate toward conservative and far-right positions. Drawing on electoral data from Brazil’s 2022 presidential election and 2024 municipal elections, comparative international literature on gender-based political polarization, and critical sociology of Brazilian political culture, we argue that the left’s repositioning as a primarily university-educated, urban, and post-materialist movement has created a structural void in its popular base—one that neither charismatic leadership nor institutional coalitions have been able to fill. We further contend that the global phenomenon of gender-based political divergence is now fully operative in Brazil, presenting challenges that cut across conventional left–right cleavages and demanding new theoretical frameworks for understanding the dynamics of contemporary democratic competition.
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