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Former top cop warns of loophole exploited by illicit Chinese vape companies ‘targeting our youth’

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A former top law enforcement official is sounding the alarm on an attempt by illicit Chinese vape companies to exploit legal loopholes by replacing nicotine with an unregulated substitute to continue selling flavored disposable vapes to children.

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«These Chinese organized crime groups, what they realized is if they go ahead and just change the ingredients in the packaging, then they create confusion and there is no enforcement or regulatory agency that then is responsible to address these illicit, illegal, disposable vapes,» former Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives Deputy Director Edgar Domenech told Fox News Digital in an interview.

The synthetic compound, 6-methyl nicotine, also known as 6MN or «NIX,» is a nicotine analog marketed under brand names including Nixodine and Metatine, with some manufacturers arguing 6-methyl nicotine products fall outside the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) authority.

Domenech, the former sheriff of New York City, said that while nicotine is a well-known addictive substance regulated by the FDA, the nicotine substitute «manufactured illegally in China» is an «unknown variable» that hasn’t been studied enough.

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FORMER ACTING DHS SECRETARY WARNS CHINESE CRIMINAL ORGANIZATIONS ARE INFILTRATING AMERICA’S HEMP INDUSTRY

Former Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives Deputy Director Edgar Domenech told Fox News Digital illicit Chinese vape companies are exploiting legal loopholes by replacing nicotine with an unregulated substitute. (Fox News Digital; Cheng Xin/Getty Images)

«It’s a different type of substance,» he said. «Now, all of a sudden, the FDA doesn’t have oversight, but it’s the same product. It’s a disposable vape product with flavors targeting our kids and our youth with unknown chemicals.»

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Pointing to law enforcement’s role in combating the illicit trade, Domenech said the companies create «confusion» by changing the product’s ingredients, causing law enforcement and regulatory agencies to «take no action.»

«The organized crime groups — they’re five steps in front of us,» he said. «By changing the substance, they are now creating additional new obstacles to figure out.»

Domenech said the companies keep the same branding, packaging, and flavors while changing just one ingredient, allowing them to profit from children who may not realize what they’re consuming.

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CORPORATE AMERICA’S CHINA ADDICTION HAS BECOME A NATIONAL SECURITY THREAT

In this Jan. 31, 2020 photo a woman holds a Puff Bar flavored disposable vape device in New York.

A woman holds a Puff Bar flavored disposable vape device in New York City, Jan. 31, 2020. (Marshall Ritzel/AP Photo)

«They’re putting these products side by side in these big shops, because the packaging is all the same,» he said. «All they’ve done is changed one of the ingredients in the product.»

Domenech said the companies are targeting «our youngest, most vulnerable generation» with flavored disposable vapes containing chemicals whose long-term health effects remain unknown.

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«They’re targeting our youth with flavors,» he said. «Whether it’s fruity flavors, candy-type flavors, dessert flavors. They’re targeting our kids to go ahead and ingest these products with unknown consequences because we don’t know what’s in them to begin with.»

As youth vaping has become more widespread, Domenech said some schools have installed bathroom sensors that detect vaping, adding, «We’ve got 11-year-olds, 12-year-olds, 14-year-olds vaping these products.»

EXPLOSIVE HOUSE REPORT REVEALS SECRET OPERATION INSIDE CHINA AT CENTER OF SOUTH KOREA’S FIGHT WITH US COMPANY

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Colorful disposable vapes

A selection of colorful disposable vapes on display for sale in a souvenir shop in London, Jan. 29, 2024. (Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP Photo)

He said that the products could lead to «unknown health and mental well-being issues down the line.»

«There is nothing healthy about the illegal disposable vapes that are flavored targeting our kids,» he said.

A recent Duke University study found 6-methyl nicotine may be stronger than nicotine, raising concerns it could be more addictive. Public patent records list Geoff Habicht, CEO of Arizona-based Mi-Pod, which Fox News Digital previously reported on as part of an investigation examining ties between the vaping industry and China, as an inventor on U.S. patents referencing 6-methyl nicotine and related compounds.

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Raising awareness among lawmakers, health professionals, parents, and schools is vital to closing regulatory gaps and preventing more children from using the products, according to Domenech.

«Education is paramount for us to combat this issue,» he said. «We need to educate our policymakers, we need to educate our health professionals, we need to educate our parents, the educational system to make them understand that these products are illegal, they have unknown substances that can have unknown consequences, health consequences.»

Domenech said lawmakers and law enforcement need clearer guidance to identify and seize the products.

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«We need to have a concerted effort to educate our policymakers at the federal level but also at the state and local levels because we need boots on the ground to understand what they can do legally in seizing these products,» he said.

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Domenech called the companies a «national security problem,» saying the products «should be seized the moment they enter this country, period.»

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«We’re losing a generation of our future, our future leaders to this product,» he said.

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Bringing the war to Putin’s front door: Is Ukraine’s energy strike strategy working?

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Ukraine’s intensifying campaign against Putin’s oil industry is having a growing impact inside Russia, forcing one of the world’s largest energy producers to restrict diesel exports, pursue fuel imports and confront shortages stretching from occupied Crimea to cities deep in the country.

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Inside Russia, the consequences are becoming increasingly visible. Former Russian opposition politician and commentator Maxim Katz said the shortages represent one of the first direct ways many Russians have experienced the consequences of the war — and could become particularly sensitive ahead of State Duma elections scheduled for September.

«This is the first time that Russians actually sees that the war has an effect on their day-to-day life — not only in the cost of fuel, but in its availability,» Katz told Fox News Digital in a Zoom interview from Israel, where he lives in exile. «You cannot buy it. And that’s a big deal for Russia.»

DRONE OFFENSIVE HITS RUSSIAN OIL TANKERS AND REFINERIES AT ‘INDUSTRIAL SCALE’ AS MOSCOW BANS DIESEL EXPORTS

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Smoke and flames rise over Moscow on June 18, 2026, following a Ukrainian drone attack that hit the Kapotnya oil refinery and other targets in the Russian capital. (East2West)

Katz said elections in Russia are neither free nor competitive, but they still serve an important function for Putin by projecting public support to regional leaders, business figures and other members of the elite.

«If everybody sees in September that he has 20% support or 10% support, then questions begin about why he should appoint governors or control the system,» Katz said. «That is something he does not want to deal with.»

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The fuel crisis, Katz argued, threatens Putin’s effort to portray himself as fully in control and to keep the cost of the war away from ordinary Russians.

«Putin tried to convince everybody that Moscow would continue to live its regular life and nobody would see the war,» Katz said. «It was his war, not the war of ordinary Russians. But when the war comes home, this is a completely different story, and it changes the equation.»

Katz also pointed to the striking reversal of Russia — historically one of the world’s largest exporters of oil and refined products — seeking fuel supplies from abroad. Reuters reported that Moscow had approached Kazakhstan about importing approximately 50,000 metric tons of gasoline after refinery outages reduced Russian gasoline output by roughly 25% from a year earlier.

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Russian President Vladimir Putin

Russian President Vladimir Putin holds his annual end-of-year press conference in Moscow on Dec. 19, 2024. (Alexander Nemenov/AFP via Getty Images)

The campaign reached a new milestone this week when Ukrainian drones struck the Omsk refinery, Russia’s largest, roughly 1,700 miles from Ukrainian-held territory. The facility temporarily halted processing after the attack, according to Reuters. Days later, another strike shut Russia’s Saratov refinery for the third time this year.

The expanding crisis raises a central question for Ukraine and its allies: Can attacks on the infrastructure that powers Russia’s military and economy alter President Vladimir Putin’s calculations — or will the Kremlin continue shielding its war effort while shifting the burden onto ordinary Russians?

«They have to buy fuel from Kazakhstan now,» Katz said. «Russia is one of the biggest exporters of oil and oil products and always has been. This is crazy.»

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Still, Katz cautioned that the Kremlin would likely continue prioritizing military supplies even as civilian shortages worsened.

«He will find the fuel for the tanks. That is not the issue,» Katz said. «The issue is his grip on Russia.»

WATCH: FIGHTS BREAK OUT AT RUSSIAN GAS STATIONS AS PUTIN ADMITS FUEL SHORTAGES

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Retired U.S. Air Force Gen. Philip M. Breedlove, former commander of U.S. European Command and NATO Supreme Allied Commander Europe, said the effects are already becoming significant.

«Without question, Ukraine’s campaign against Russia’s oil and energy infrastructure is having a real and growing impact on the Russian homeland,» Breedlove told Fox News Digital. «The reported reductions in fuel production are significant — close to a third by some estimates.»

«These strikes are beginning to seriously impact not just the economy but the Kremlin’s ability to sustain its war effort and military operations,» he added. «When Ukraine is able to hit large, high-value energy targets deep inside Russian territory, that changes the equation.»

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«Russia cannot effectively defend every refinery and energy facility across their enormous territory, and that is the core problem for Moscow,» Breedlove said. «Every asset they deploy to defend their infrastructure are assets not deployed to the frontlines.»

Moscow has already taken emergency measures. Russia banned diesel exports through the end of July as drone attacks forced unplanned refinery shutdowns and reduced domestic supplies. Seaborne exports of diesel and gasoline fell 39% in June compared with May and 46% from the previous year, according to Reuters.

RUSSIAN GENERALS’ ASSASSINATIONS EXPOSE GROWING RIFT INSIDE PUTIN’S SECURITY APPARATUS

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Steam rises from chimneys of the Gazprom Neft's oil refinery in Omsk

Steam rises from chimneys of the Gazprom Neft’s oil refinery in Omsk, Russia November 18, 2022.  (Alexey Malgavko/Reuters)

Ukraine’s ambassador to Israel, Yevgen Korniychuk, said American intelligence has played an important role in helping Kyiv penetrate Russia’s extensive air-defense network.

«You always have to give credit to the United States,» Korniychuk told Fox News Digital. «U.S. intelligence is helping Ukrainian missiles and drones avoid Russian anti-missile defense.»

The Wall Street Journal, citing U.S. officials, said in a 2025 report that «The U.S. will provide Ukraine with intelligence for long-range missile strikes on Russia’s energy infrastructure.» Reuters, citing the Financial Times, also reported that «U.S. intelligence has helped Kyiv strike important Russian energy assets, including oil refineries, far beyond the front line, the newspaper said, citing unnamed Ukrainian and U.S. officials familiar with the campaign.»

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Fox News Digital reached out to the State Department and the White House to confirm the reports and the Ukrainian ambassador’s claims.

Korniychuk said the strikes are creating serious pressure inside the Russian system, even if they have not yet persuaded Putin to change course.

Footage shows the launch of Ukraine’s homegrown long-range "Flamingo" cruise missiles during a strike on Russian military infrastructure

Footage shows the launch of Ukraine’s homegrown long-range «Flamingo» cruise missiles during a strike on Russian military infrastructure (East2West)

«The majority of the Russian leadership understands that this is a crucial problem, but Putin personally does not,» he said. «The distance between him and the rest of the Russian leadership is growing tremendously. Even people he has trusted for many years understand that this is going nowhere, but that will not necessarily bring Putin to the same conclusion.»

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Retired Lt. Gen. Richard Newton, former U.S. Air Force assistant vice chief of staff, argued that the broader strategic picture is shifting in Ukraine’s favor.

«Throughout the conflict, the vast majority of the Russian homeland has been a sanctuary,» Newton said. «However, over the last several months, Ukrainian drone attacks have reached deep inside Russia — up to 1,500 miles recently.»

Newton said the pressure was arriving as Western support strengthened.

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«That is a credit to President Zelenskyy, his military leadership and Ukraine’s defense industrial base,» he said. «And it comes at the right time, with Europe now providing military capabilities and financial resources — and now, with renewed public support from President Trump.»

Firefighters respond to burning wreckage at a commercial facility following a missile strike.

Firefighters work at the site of a logistics hub belonging to a private delivery company after it was hit by Russian missile strikes in Kharkiv, Ukraine, on Jan. 13, 2026. (Sofiia Gatilova/Reuters)

Yet the strategy has limits. Russia continues to generate billions in energy revenue beyond the reach of Ukrainian drones.

Urgewald, a Germany-based nonprofit environmental and human-rights organization analysis of Kpler cargo data found that the European Union received 114 of the 118 cargoes shipped from Russia’s Yamal LNG project between January and May 2026 — about 97% of the project’s exports. The shipments totaled 8.37 million metric tons and had an estimated value of roughly $5.7 billion.

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«Current trends show EU payments for Russian Yamal LNG are on course to reach almost $7 billion in the first half of 2026 alone,» Alexander Kirk, a sanctions campaigner at Urgewald, told Fox News Digital. «These dollars support Russia’s war economy and help sustain Moscow’s aggression against Ukraine, including the drone and missile warfare terrorizing Ukrainian cities.»

The figures capture the dual reality confronting Kyiv: Ukraine can damage refineries, disrupt domestic fuel supplies and force Moscow to divert resources, while Russia continues earning substantial revenue from global energy markets.

Amb. Korniychuk said Zelenskyy had given the military 40 days to substantially change the situation.

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Katz cautioned that there was no way to predict whether Putin’s system was approaching collapse, but said authoritarian regimes can appear stable until they unravel with extraordinary speed.

He compared that uncertainty to the final months of the Soviet Union.

«Nobody before the August Putsch could even think that in three months from now there would be no Soviet Union,» Katz said. «Systems like this — this is one of their common things — collapse quick.»

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For now, Ukraine’s strikes have not halted Russian military operations or forced Putin to negotiate. But they have reached deep into Russia, strained its fuel system and undermined the Kremlin’s effort to keep the war distant from its population.

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The Grinch

The Russian oil tanker intercepted between Spain and Morocco. (Etat Major des Armees)

The question being asked by analysts is no longer whether Ukraine can hit Russia’s economic engine, but how much sustained pressure that engine — and Putin’s political system — can withstand.

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russia, vladimir putin, ukraine, volodymyr zelenskyy, conflicts, global economy

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Un basurero en Indonesia se incendió hace más de una semana y sigue ardiendo

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Un vertedero en Indonesia sigue ardiendo más de una semana después de que se incendiara, produciendo humos densos y tóxicos que han enfermado y desplazado a los residentes cercanos, y poniendo de manifiesto los problemas que el país arrastra desde hace tiempo con la gestión de residuos.

El incendio en el vertedero de Jatiwaringin, en la regencia de Tangerang, al oeste de la capital, Yakarta, comenzó el 30 de junio, lo que llevó a las autoridades locales a declarar el estado de emergencia.

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Para el martes, el fuego había consumido casi la mitad del vertedero, cuya superficie equivale a unos 60 canchas de fútbol americano, según la Policía Nacional de Indonesia.

El humo tóxico obligó a 192 residentes a evacuar las zonas aledañas, según informó la policía en un comunicado el jueves.

Hasta el domingo, 72 personas habían recibido tratamiento por infecciones respiratorias agudas, declaró Maesyal Rasyid, regente de Tangerang.

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Las autoridades sanitarias advirtieron a los residentes sobre los riesgos de la exposición a los gases tóxicos y los instaron a usar mascarillas al aire libre.

Funcionarios indonesios declararon esta semana que el incendio estaba a punto de ser extinguido.

Legisladores y activistas ambientales han señalado que el siniestro es un indicio de la persistente crisis de residuos en el país:

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Indonesia ha tenido dificultades para frenar los vertidos a cielo abierto, una práctica que deja la basura vulnerable a incendiarse y a la propagación de materiales tóxicos.

El vertedero de Jatiwarigin está repleto de basura procedente de los suburbios al oeste de Yakarta, una de las zonas urbanas más densamente pobladas del mundo.

Recibe cerca de 3.000 toneladas de residuos al día, o más de un millón de toneladas al año, según funcionarios indonesios.

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Algunas de las pilas de basura en el vertedero alcanzaban la altura de un edificio de siete pisos, según Andra Soni, gobernador de Banten, la provincia donde se ubica Tangerang.

Según la Agencia Nacional de Gestión de Desastres, las labores de extinción se vieron obstaculizadas por la gran cantidad de materiales combustibles en el vertedero y la enorme altura de la basura apilada, así como por el calor y los fuertes vientos propios de la actual estación seca.

Los bomberos tuvieron dificultades para alcanzar las brasas que se encontraban en el interior de los montones, incluso mientras utilizaban helicópteros, camiones de bomberos y excavadoras para sofocar los incendios en la superficie.

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Rizal Irawan, funcionario del Ministerio de Medio Ambiente de Indonesia, declaró que una vez finalizadas las labores de extinción del incendio, se iniciaría una investigación para determinar la causa del mismo.

Según informó el ministerio el año pasado, alrededor del 60% de los residuos generados en Indonesia se gestionaban de forma inadecuada.

Si bien Indonesia aprobó una ley en 2008 que obligaba al cierre de todos los vertederos a cielo abierto, el país ha tenido dificultades para hacer cumplir la prohibición.

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Según Muhammad Aminullah, director ejecutivo del Foro Indonesio para el Medio Ambiente, un grupo activista con sede en Yakarta, ha habido una falta de educación sobre la correcta separación de residuos y de apoyo a instalaciones como los vertederos.

“Esto no es un suceso inesperado, sino la consecuencia de una gestión inadecuada de los residuos”, declaró Wahyu Eka Setyawan, activista del grupo, refiriéndose al incendio de Jatiwaringin.

El año pasado, Hanif Faisol Nurofiq, entonces ministro de Medio Ambiente de Indonesia, advirtió severamente a los operadores de vertederos en el área metropolitana de Yakarta que pusieran fin a los vertidos a cielo abierto, incluso en Jatiwaringin.

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Declaró haberse indignado tras presenciar un incendio durante una visita al lugar en octubre.

Tras el incendio más reciente, los legisladores también han examinado detenidamente el sistema de gestión de residuos de Indonesia.

El ministro coordinador de alimentación de Indonesia, Zulkifli Hasan, declaró el lunes que Indonesia se propone erradicar los vertidos a cielo abierto para 2028.

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Ateng Sutisna, miembro de la Cámara de Representantes, instó la semana pasada a los funcionarios a realizar auditorías de riesgo de incendio en todos los vertederos y a transitar hacia mejores sistemas de gestión de vertederos.

“Si se permite que los residuos se acumulen sin una gestión adecuada y sin un sistema de detección temprana”, dijo, “estamos fomentando el potencial de un desastre”.

c.2026 The New York Times Company

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Flávio Bolsonaro enfrenta una inesperada interna familiar y una lucha de poder en la heterogénea derecha brasileña

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A menos de tres meses de las elecciones presidenciales, el candidato ultraconservador, Flávio Bolsonaro, enfrenta una inesperada interna familiar y persistentes dudas en la heterogénea derecha brasileña empeñada hoy en una lucha de poder.

El actual senador, de 44 años, busca destronar al presidente Luiz Lula da Silva, que irá por la reelección en los comicios del 4 de octubre, pero una serie de escándalos amenazan sus aspiraciones.

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El hijo mayor del condenado expresidente Jair Bolsonaro venía subiendo mes a mes en las encuestas y se hallaba en un virtual empate técnico con Lula, pero sus supuestos vínculos con un banquero detenido, Daniel Vorcaro, sacudieron su campaña.

Vorcaro está en el centro de una investigación por un esquema ilegal vinculado al proceso de liquidación del Banco Master, que salpica también al gobierno. En concreto se lo acusa de fraude bancario.

En un audio revelado por la prensa local, se escucha al postulante presidencial derechista pedirle dinero a Vorcaro para financiar una película biográfica sobre su padre. Incluso, lo llama “hermano”. Entonces, la imagen de Bolsonaro sufrió un durísimo golpe que derivó en una caída en los sondeos.

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La última encuesta de la firma AtlasIntel le atribuye a Lula un 48,8% de intención de voto frente al 42,3% de Bolsonaro.

¿Qué está pasando en la derecha brasileña?

En medio del escándalo del Banco Master, la derecha brasileña empezó a mostrar grietas en la alianza electoral que busca devolver al clan Bolsonaro al poder.

El analista brasileño Fernando Guarnieri, polítólogo de la Universidad de San Pablo, dijo a TN que en el país no existe una sola derecha cohesionada y afirmó que ahora, esa diversidad, está pasandole factura al candidato.

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El candidato de la derecha brasileña Flavio Bolsonaro (Foto: REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini)

“Desde las elecciones de 2022 -e incluso antes, durante el gobierno de Bolsonaro- hemos visto que no existe una única facción de derecha, sino varias”, afirmó.

Al respecto, mencionó: “Está la derecha ´pragmática´ -a menudo denominada ´Centrão´, que habitualmente se alinea con el gobierno de turno. Existe la derecha liberal, que aboga por un Estado mínimo; la derecha conservadora, que se opone a la ampliación de los derechos de las minorías; y la derecha radical y antisistema, junto con la extrema derecha antidemocrática. En resumen, hay diversas facciones de derecha que se unieron en torno a Bolsonaro y que ahora pugnan por la hegemonía dentro del bloque».

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En ese escenario, estallaron las luchas internas y más cuando Flávio Bolsonaro fue “elegido a dedo” por su padre.

Leé también: Quién es Alberto Zaltzberg, el argentino que busca convertirse en el primer alcalde latino de la ciudad de Aventura en Miami-Dade

Para Guarnieri, “estas divisiones y conflictos entre las ´élites´ podrían derivar en ´fuego amigo´ y en la aparición de nuevos escándalos, erosionando gradualmente la percepción de que Flávio es la única opción para derrotar a Lula».

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“Es muy probable que la elección se decida en una segunda vuelta (prevista para el 25 de octubre). Conscientes de ello, los votantes de derecha podrían optar por explorar otras alternativas en la primera vuelta”, indicó.

Según el analista, “todo depende de las revelaciones explosivas que aún están por surgir, de cómo las gestione Flávio Bolsonaro y de si logra pasar de una postura defensiva a imponerse en los debates frente a sus adversarios”.

Un nuevo frente: la familia

Pero Flávio Bolsonario recibió un piedrazo en la cara desde su propio entorno familiar.

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El candidato mantuvo una durísima pelea mediática con su “madrasta”, Michelle Bolsonaro, que repercutió muy fuerte en el seno del Partido Liberal, liderado por su marido.

La esposa de su padre anunció públicamente que no respaldaba la candidatura presidencial de su hijastro y lo acusó de haberla humillado.

Pero el escándalo no se quedó ahí: Michelle, considerada la dirigente con mayor influencia entre el electorado femenino y evangélico, renunció a la presidencia del ala femenina del partido.

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Michelle Bolsonaro en plena campaña (Foto: REUTERS/Pilar Olivares)

Michelle Bolsonaro en plena campaña (Foto: REUTERS/Pilar Olivares)

Según dijo, desde ahora se dedicará solo a “cuidar” del exmandatario, que cumple una condena a 11 años de prisión por golpismo.

Esta pelea dividió al Partido Liberal. La salida de escena de Michelle puede ser un duro golpe para las aspiraciones de Flávio de llegar al Palacio del Planalto.

La mujer, que llegó a coquetear con su propia candidatura presidencial, no solo es la principal representante femenina del movimiento de su esposo, sino que además arrastra el estratégico voto evangélico, vital en un país como Brasil donde la influencia de este grupo religioso se expande en todos los ámbitos, ya sea mediáticos, económicos y políticos.

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Pero, ¿de qué acusa Michelle Bolsonaro a su hijastro?

Leé también: Más de 30 años después de la caída de la URSS, Cuba gira hacia el libre mercado para escapar de la presión de Trump

En un video explosivo, la actual esposa de Jair Bolsonaro acusó a Flávio de haberla “humillado” y “maltratado” durante una discusión sobre estrategia electoral. En disputa estaba la lucha por la nominación de aliados para las elecciones locales y regionales.

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Me faltó al respeto, me trató mal y me dijo que era mejor que me mantuviera al margen de las decisiones del partido, porque había llegado ayer y no entendía nada de política”, aseguró.

La acusación causó un terremoto en el partido. Michelle tiene un ejército de más de 8,2 millones de seguidores solo en Instagram.

El candidato intentó salir al paso con un pedido de disculpas y aventuró: “Respeto muchísimo a Michelle, tengo la convicción de que vamos a superar este momento difícil y que ella va a estar caminando con nosotros”.

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Pero el daño ya estaba hecho. Analistas estiman que la principal debilidad de la candidatura de Flávio Bolsonaro está precisamente en su escasa llegada al electorado femenino.

Sin Michelle a su lado, sus posibilidad caen, como reflejan las encuestas. Habrá que ver ahora si la esposa de Jair Bolsonaro mantiene al menos su candidatura a senadora y si la familia logra recomponer la paz a menos de tres meses de las elecciones.

Brasil, Flavio Bolsonaro, Lula Da Silva, Sumario

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