By Anthony Boadle and Andrea Shalal
BRASILIA/WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Brazil’s leftist President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva traveled to Washington on Thursday, invited to the White House by President Joe Biden in a visit that will focus on support for Brazilian democracy and shared environmental commitments.
Relations between the Western Hemisphere’s two largest democracies had been lukewarm under Lula’s far-right predecessor Jair Bolsonaro, an ally of Republican former U.S. President Donald Trump.
Lula will visit Biden on Friday afternoon, after meeting with Senator Bernie Sanders and Democratic lawmakers in the morning.
Brazil’s Foreign Ministry said support for democracy, human rights and the environment will be at the center of Lula’s agenda in Washington.
Brazil is also eager for more countries to contribute to the billion-dollar Amazon Fund started by Germany and Norway to fund rainforest conservation and sustainable development.
Lula’s delegation includes Environment Minister Marina Silva, as well as Finance Minister Fernando Haddad and Racial Equality Minister Anielle Franco.
Brazil reinforced its commitment to protecting the Amazon rainforest this week by launching by an enforcement operation against illegal gold miners that have devastated the Yanomami indigenous reservation in northern Brazil.
Lula’s predecessor relaxed environmental protections, encouraging mining and logging in the Amazon and allowing deforestation in the region to hit a 15-year high.
“Brazil is once again an active protagonist in climate change talks and is seeking the engagement and financial commitment of other countries,” said Michel Arslanian, secretary for the Americas at Brazil’s Foreign Ministry.
Latin America’s largest nation is also interested in preferential access to the U.S. defense market and Pentagon equipment sales, Arslanian told reporters.
Asked about U.S. government pressure for Brasilia to support Ukraine in its war with Russia, the diplomat said Brazil remains neutral and calls for dialogue to reach peace.
Lula’s meeting with Biden represents a show of support for Brazil’s democratic institutions, which came under stress with Bolsonaro’s refusal to concede defeat in the October election and the storming of government buildings by his supporters on Jan. 8, one week after the presidential inauguration.
Bolsonaro flew to Florida 48 hours before Lula was sworn in and has requested a tourist visa to stay in the United States. Brazilian officials declined to comment on Bolsonaro’s travel and said it was a matter for U.S. immigration authorities.
(Reporting by Anthony Boadle in Brasilia and Andrea Shalal in Washington; Editing by Brad Haynes and Jonathan Oatis)