Brazil’s president fails to win poll outright
RIO DE JANEIRO, Monday
Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff and challenger Aecio Neves launched their campaigns today for a tight run-off election, vying for the support of frustrated voters demanding change amid an economic slowdown.
Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff and challenger Aecio Neves launched their campaigns today for a tight run-off election, vying for the support of frustrated voters demanding change amid an economic slowdown.
After
a dramatic race, the leftist incumbent won Sunday’s first-round poll
with 41.59 per cent of the vote to 33.55 per cent for business favourite
Neves, who enters the second round with strong momentum after staging
an improbable comeback against popular environmentalist Marina Silva.
Just
a month ago Silva looked set to become multi-racial Brazil’s first
black president, upending the campaign when she took her late running
mate’s place atop the Socialist ticket after his death in a plane crash,
vowing to bring a “new politics” to the world’s seventh-largest
economy.
But Mr Neves, a former governor and the scion
of an influential political family, mobilised his powerful Social
Democratic Party (PSDB) machine to reverse Silva’s lead on the eve of
the vote.
Markets reacted favorably, with Sao Paulo stocks rising 5.6 per cent in morning trade.
Both Ms Rousseff and Mr Neves were looking for Ms Silva’s endorsement today — but none has been forthcoming.
Ms
Silva, who grew up poor and illiterate in the Amazon before rising to
become a respected conservation activist, senator and environment
minister, forcefully but fleetingly tapped frustration with corruption
scandals, poor public services and four years of economic slowdown.
OPTED FOR TWO PARTIES
But
while “change” has been the buzzword of the campaign, voters ultimately
opted for the two parties that have ruled Brazil for the past 20 years:
Rousseff’s Workers’ Party, in power since 2003, and Neves’s PSDB.
Voters
were also choosing 27 governors, 513 congressmen and 1,069 regional
lawmakers, as well as a third of the senate — with a total of more than
26,000 candidates to choose from.
Yet it is the
presidential contest that provides the most telling snapshot of the
political state of a giant emerging nation. That snapshot is by no means
conclusive, however.
Sunday saw Ms Rousseff, Brazil’s first female president, shed some five per cent on her 2010 first-round vote.
At
the same time, her PT won the southeastern state of Minas Gerais,
Brazil’s second-most populous with 10.6 per cent of the total electorate
and also former governor Neves’s supposed stronghold.
With
Silva’s campaign having imploded, the question for voters who engaged
in angry protests against corruption and poor quality public services
last year is now how to prod their politicians towards change and
whether the run-off candidates can deliver it.
Ms
Rousseff, 66, has also been battling an emerging scandal at state-owned
oil giant Petrobras, which she formerly chaired, amid allegations by a
former director of huge kickbacks largely benefiting PT politicians and
their allies.
The former leftist guerrilla, who was
imprisoned and tortured for fighting Brazil’s dictatorship, needs around
a third of Ms Silva’s votes to win a second term. (AFP)
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