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on neoconservatism (ALMEIDA, 2018), which identifies religion as one element with t of a broader
ideological constellation, including economic liberalism, political authoritarianism, and cultural nationalism.
Furthermore, the rise in religious terms in election years (2020 and 2022) suggests the strategic
instrumentalization of religion for electoral purposes. The increase in the God-President correlation from
0.347 in 2021 to 0.511 in 2022 demonstrates the calculated use of religious symbols. This instrumentalization
is not a uniquely Brazilian phenomenon, finding parallels in the global right-wing populisms analyzed by
Löwy (2019) and in the strategies of leaders such as Viktor Orbán in Hungary and Donald Trump in the
United States.
Contrary to the common perception of evangelical influence, the data show limited pressure to influence
public policy formulation. Several factors may explain this limitation: the heterogeneity of the evangelical
group, internal divisions within the neoconservative collective identity, and the system of checks and balances
in Brazilian democracy (SOARES, 2025).
First, the Brazilian evangelical community is not a monolithic bloc. Internal divisions over economics,
security, and even moral issues have limited its ability to exert unified pressure. In addition, military,
economic, and technical groups within the government compete with religious influence.
The results contribute to the debate on secularization in Brazil, demonstrating that, even under a
government with strong evangelical support, the secular nature of the state, at least in the discursive field,
remained preserved given the low evangelical pressure against the government, so that political identity
prevailed. This finding supports Mariano's (2011) thesis on “Brazilian secularism,” characterized by formal
separation with persistent symbolic influence, but within democratic institutional limits.
Therefore, the research identified the role of religion in Brazilian political polarization, serving more as an
identity marker than as a source of pressure for specific policies. This polarization, although it seems intense
at the discursive level, did not show itself in reality. The pattern observed suggests that religion, in the
contemporary Brazilian context, operates more as a resource for political mobilization than as a source of
autonomous political authority, as well as a defender of previously established political identities.
6. Conclusions
This research analyzed 72,750 tweets from politicians and religious leaders during the Bolsonaro
administration, revealing specific patterns in the relationship between religion and politics in contemporary
Brazil.
Religious themes gained prominence mainly in election years, confirming their instrumental use. The God-
President correlation increased significantly in 2022 (0.511), contrasting with lower values in non-election
years. There was also a consistent reduction in the discussion of sexual and reproductive rights, with a decline
between 2021 and 2022, demonstrating that traditional moral themes were not central even in a conservative
government.
Leaders such as Silas Malafaia and Marco Feliciano acted more to defend the government than to press
for specific agendas, functioning as political spokespersons in religious language. The steady growth of the
discursive association between Bolsonaro and national symbols far exceeded religious correlations.
The results challenge simplistic interpretations of desecularization, demonstrating that contemporary
religious influence operates within secular frameworks, competing with other sources of authority and
identity, such as politics. The research confirms, at least in terms of communication, that Brazilian
neoconservatism articulates religion with other ideological elements, with political, not religious, identity
being the determining factor.