Brazil’s far-right President Jair Bolsonaro on Thursday launched a new political party called the Alliance for Brazil, which will put an emphasis on God, family and homeland, as he tries to win back evangelical voters. “If I had done this sooner, we would have gotten 100 deputies and a senator elected in each state,” Bolsonaro said at a formal launch event in a luxury hotel in the capital Brasilia. It’s the ninth time that the 64-year-old Bolsonaro, a former army captain, has changed parties in his three-decade political career. He just left the ultraconservative Social Liberal Party (PSL), which had been a fringe group until he joined in March 2018. The PSL profited from the right-wing wave that saw Bolsonaro swept into power — the party got more than 50 deputies and four senators elected to Congress in the last general election. Evangelical voters helped propel Bolsonaro to the presidency, but he had fallen out of favor with them. The formation of the Alliance could help him regain the confidence of that key voting bloc.