<p>When Jair Bolsonaro survived a knife attack at a 2018 campaign rally and went on to win Brazil's presidency that October, it only fueled die-hard supporters' faith in the man they call "The Myth."</p>.<p>But the aura of invincibility around the far-right leader has faded as he enters the last year of his term with his popularity at an all-time low, the economy in recession and Brazil hit by one of the world's worst Covid-19 outbreaks.</p>.<p>Complications from that infamous stabbing have likewise dogged the 66-year-old president -- the most recent emerging Monday, when he was rushed to the hospital because of an intestinal obstruction, his latest health problem since the attack.</p>.<p>Bolsonaro, who tweeted a picture of himself flashing a thumbs-up from his hospital bed, said he may need surgery to fix the blockage, which forced him to break off a New Year's beach vacation and jet to the hospital in Sao Paulo.</p>.<p>"This is my second hospitalization with the same symptoms, the result of the stabbing on September 6, 2018 and four big surgeries," he wrote.</p>.<p>It is the latest bout of drama in a presidency filled with them, including before it even began.</p>.<p>Known for a brash, polarizing style that earned him the nickname "Tropical Trump," the former army captain surged to prominence during the 2018 campaign by playing to voters disgusted with politics-as-usual and Brazil's massive "Car Wash" corruption scandal.</p>.<p>His followers' belief in their "Messias," or "Messiah" -- Bolsonaro's middle name -- only grew when he survived the knife attack that nearly cost him his life, perpetrated by an assailant who was later found mentally unfit to stand trial.</p>.<p>Bolsonaro went on to win the presidency in a landslide, taking office on January 1, 2019 with solid backing from Brazil's powerful "beef, bullets and Bibles" caucus -- the farm lobby, security hardliners and Evangelical Christians.</p>.<p>Supporters love his gloves-off style, anti-establishment message and folksy touch on social media, where his movement thrives.</p>.<p>But he infuriates critics with his divisive vitriol and disdain for political correctness, often drawing accusations of racism, sexism and homophobia.</p>.<p>And his support has badly eroded among the political center and business sector as his government has floundered against the pandemic and its economic fallout.</p>.<p>Bolsonaro has insistently downplayed Covid-19, defied expert advice on fighting it and mocked face masks, social distancing and vaccines.</p>.<p>Despite coming down with Covid-19 himself in July 2020, he has stuck to his message, refusing to be vaccinated and joking the jab could "turn you into an alligator."</p>.<p>A Senate investigative commission recommended in October he face criminal charges, including crimes against humanity, for his government's response to Covid-19.</p>.<p>Bolsonaro also faces international outcry over the destruction of the Amazon rainforest, which has surged on his watch, fueled by cattle ranches encroaching on the jungle.</p>.<p>The damage to Brazil's international brand has worried investors, already alarmed by a recession, soaring inflation and the administration's failure to deliver on many of its promised budget-slashing reforms.</p>.<p>Bolsonaro also faces dozens of impeachment requests and a series of corruption scandals involving his inner circle.</p>.<p>Recent polls place him far behind his likely top opponent, leftist ex-president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (2003-2010), in Brazil's October 2022 elections.</p>.<p>Born in 1955 to a Catholic family with Italian roots, Bolsonaro served as an army paratrooper before starting his political career in 1988 as a Rio de Janeiro city councilor.</p>.<p>Two years later, he was elected to the lower house of Congress, where he served until becoming president.</p>.<p>He has ignited one explosive controversy after another with his remarks.</p>.<p>In 2014, he made headlines by saying left-wing lawmaker Maria do Rosario was "not worth raping" because she was "too ugly."</p>.<p>In 2011, he told Playboy magazine he would rather his sons be killed in an accident than come out as gay.</p>.<p>He is openly nostalgic for Brazil's 1964-1985 military dictatorship, and has cultivated a close relationship with the army top brass.</p>.<p>"The dictatorship's mistake," he said in 2016, "was to torture and not kill" leftist dissidents and suspected sympathizers.</p>.<p>Bolsonaro has four sons -- three of them politicians -- and, in what he called a moment of "weakness," a daughter.</p>.<p><strong>Watch latest videos by DH here:</strong></p>
<p>When Jair Bolsonaro survived a knife attack at a 2018 campaign rally and went on to win Brazil's presidency that October, it only fueled die-hard supporters' faith in the man they call "The Myth."</p>.<p>But the aura of invincibility around the far-right leader has faded as he enters the last year of his term with his popularity at an all-time low, the economy in recession and Brazil hit by one of the world's worst Covid-19 outbreaks.</p>.<p>Complications from that infamous stabbing have likewise dogged the 66-year-old president -- the most recent emerging Monday, when he was rushed to the hospital because of an intestinal obstruction, his latest health problem since the attack.</p>.<p>Bolsonaro, who tweeted a picture of himself flashing a thumbs-up from his hospital bed, said he may need surgery to fix the blockage, which forced him to break off a New Year's beach vacation and jet to the hospital in Sao Paulo.</p>.<p>"This is my second hospitalization with the same symptoms, the result of the stabbing on September 6, 2018 and four big surgeries," he wrote.</p>.<p>It is the latest bout of drama in a presidency filled with them, including before it even began.</p>.<p>Known for a brash, polarizing style that earned him the nickname "Tropical Trump," the former army captain surged to prominence during the 2018 campaign by playing to voters disgusted with politics-as-usual and Brazil's massive "Car Wash" corruption scandal.</p>.<p>His followers' belief in their "Messias," or "Messiah" -- Bolsonaro's middle name -- only grew when he survived the knife attack that nearly cost him his life, perpetrated by an assailant who was later found mentally unfit to stand trial.</p>.<p>Bolsonaro went on to win the presidency in a landslide, taking office on January 1, 2019 with solid backing from Brazil's powerful "beef, bullets and Bibles" caucus -- the farm lobby, security hardliners and Evangelical Christians.</p>.<p>Supporters love his gloves-off style, anti-establishment message and folksy touch on social media, where his movement thrives.</p>.<p>But he infuriates critics with his divisive vitriol and disdain for political correctness, often drawing accusations of racism, sexism and homophobia.</p>.<p>And his support has badly eroded among the political center and business sector as his government has floundered against the pandemic and its economic fallout.</p>.<p>Bolsonaro has insistently downplayed Covid-19, defied expert advice on fighting it and mocked face masks, social distancing and vaccines.</p>.<p>Despite coming down with Covid-19 himself in July 2020, he has stuck to his message, refusing to be vaccinated and joking the jab could "turn you into an alligator."</p>.<p>A Senate investigative commission recommended in October he face criminal charges, including crimes against humanity, for his government's response to Covid-19.</p>.<p>Bolsonaro also faces international outcry over the destruction of the Amazon rainforest, which has surged on his watch, fueled by cattle ranches encroaching on the jungle.</p>.<p>The damage to Brazil's international brand has worried investors, already alarmed by a recession, soaring inflation and the administration's failure to deliver on many of its promised budget-slashing reforms.</p>.<p>Bolsonaro also faces dozens of impeachment requests and a series of corruption scandals involving his inner circle.</p>.<p>Recent polls place him far behind his likely top opponent, leftist ex-president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (2003-2010), in Brazil's October 2022 elections.</p>.<p>Born in 1955 to a Catholic family with Italian roots, Bolsonaro served as an army paratrooper before starting his political career in 1988 as a Rio de Janeiro city councilor.</p>.<p>Two years later, he was elected to the lower house of Congress, where he served until becoming president.</p>.<p>He has ignited one explosive controversy after another with his remarks.</p>.<p>In 2014, he made headlines by saying left-wing lawmaker Maria do Rosario was "not worth raping" because she was "too ugly."</p>.<p>In 2011, he told Playboy magazine he would rather his sons be killed in an accident than come out as gay.</p>.<p>He is openly nostalgic for Brazil's 1964-1985 military dictatorship, and has cultivated a close relationship with the army top brass.</p>.<p>"The dictatorship's mistake," he said in 2016, "was to torture and not kill" leftist dissidents and suspected sympathizers.</p>.<p>Bolsonaro has four sons -- three of them politicians -- and, in what he called a moment of "weakness," a daughter.</p>.<p><strong>Watch latest videos by DH here:</strong></p>