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'I have nothing to hide': Brazil presidential hopeful comes out

Eduardo Leite, a Brazilian governor and prominent critic of President Jair Bolsonaro, came out as gay in a TV interview Thursday.
Image: Rio Grande do Sul Governor Eduardo Leite talking at his office of the Piratini Palace in Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, on March 31, 2020.
Rio Grande do Sul Governor Eduardo Leite talking at his office of the Piratini Palace in Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, on March 31, 2020.Felipe Della Valle / Agencia Piratini via AFP - Getty Images file
/ Source: Reuters

SAO PAULO - Brazilian governor and potential major party presidential candidate Eduardo Leite, a prominent critic of President Jair Bolsonaro, came out as gay in a TV interview.

Leite, governor of the southern state of Rio Grande do Sul, would be the first openly gay presidential candidate in Brazil. Anti-gay rhetoric has been a staple of speeches by Bolsonaro, who once declared that if he had a gay son, he would rather he died in an accident.

"I have never spoken about a subject related to my private life", Leite told Brazilian journalist Pedro Bial in a TV interview on Thursday evening.

"But during this moment of low integrity in Brazil, I have nothing to hide, I am gay. I am a governor who is gay, not a gay governor, as former President Obama in the U.S. was a president who was Black, not a Black president. And I am proud of that."

Leite, a member of social democratic party PSDB, supported Bolsonaro in the second round of Brazil's 2018 elections, but became a critic of the president's management of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Leite, 36, will be a candidate in the PSDB primaries scheduled for November to choose the presidential candidate for the 2022 elections. Other candidates in the primary are the Sao Paulo governor Joao Doria, senator Tasso Jereissati and former senator Arthur Virgílio.

Bolsonaro on Friday told supporters Leite was trying to use his coming out as a "business card" for the presidential campaign.

"I have nothing against his private life, but he cannot impose his lifestyle on others," he added.

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