RICH-POOR DIVIDE DOMINATES
BRAZIL’S TIGHT PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION RUN-OFF
RT Published time: October 26, 2014
Brazilian voters are
heading to the polls to choose the country’s president in a tight presidential
run-off with voters divided along class lines as income inequality remains a
critical problem.
A pre-election poll
by Ibope agency demonstrates that 66-year-old leftist incumbent president Dilma
Rousseff should attract 49 percent of the prospective total vote, while the
second candidate, 54-year-old pro-business Aecio Neves, is predicted to garner
43 percent.
Another poll by
Datafolha also showcased the Rousseff’s lead: 47 percent compared with 43
percent for Neves.
Finally, a third poll
published on Saturday by MDA, a lesser-known agency, gave Neves 50.3 percent of
votes to 49.7 percent for Rousseff.
All in all, experts
agree that Rousseff has a close edge over Neves, but the result might still be
a surprise due to the polarized attitudes in the Brazilian community.
“The election is open because there is still
a latent desire for change,” Rafael Cortez,
political scientist at São Paulo-based consulting firm Tendências Consultoria,
told the Wall Street Journal.
"The country is divided in two, with
half feeling that social inclusion and protections are what matter most, and
the other half believing that macroeconomic stability is more important," Carlos Pereira, a political analyst at the Gertulio Vargas
Foundation, Brazil's leading think tank, said to AP.
In the current
election, Rousseff has the poor’s support: after a dozen years of her party
being in power, 40 million people have been lifted from the brink of poverty
due to social reforms and economic boom which country experienced until Rouseff
came to power. The growth during her four-year rule is the lowest for any
Brazil president since the early 1990s, The Financial Times reports.
Ibope agency, when carrying
out the latest survey, spoke with over 3,000 voters across Brazil.
"I'm voting for Dilma because the
Workers' Party has made life easier for the poor. I still live in a slum, but
now my home is full of nice, modern things — I've got a TV, a new refrigerator
and air conditioning," Ana Paula
Marinho, a nurse who lives in the Pavao-Pavaozinho favela, said.
"We can see that we've got a better
future with Dilma," she added.
However, centrist
Neves is supported by the upper-middle class and the rich, promising the
economic growth and to deal with high inflation for the country that has been
in decline for four years.
Patricia Botelha, who
lives in Rio's wealthy Ipanema neighborhood, said Rousseff's poor management
resulted in Brazil's economic recession - and all Brazilians will pay the price
if the country doesn't rebound soon.
"We've never
seen social advances among the poor as we've witnessed during the last 12
years. Those are real accomplishments and we're all better off for it. But we
need new ideas on the economy, on how to keep growing, or those gains will be
reversed no matter what policies are enacted," Botelha told Ibope.
The presidential race
got a surprising turn in August, when the main opposition candidate Eduardo
Campos was killed in a plane crash on the campaign trail.
The first round of
the election took place on October 5, making it necessary to conduct the
run-off when Rousseff came in first but failed to gather more than 50 percent
of the vote.
Candidates’ blame game: Ghosts of
past v monsters of present
In the final TV
debate on Friday, Rousseff and Neves clashed over the ongoing bribery scandal
at the Brazil’s largest company, oil giant Petroleo Brasileiro SA.
Neves asked Rousseff
if she was informed about a scam that reportedly got a pay-off from Petrobras
oil company contractors, with the funds given to Rousseff’s Workers’ Party –
allegations Rousseff dismissed.
Rousseff emphasized
the expansion of social benefits and the increase in salaries, urging the
public to remember “the ghosts of the past”: when Neves’s party was in
power, the majority of the nation suffered in poverty and unemployment. Neves,
however, argued that one should be more afraid of “monsters of the present”:
inflation, economic recession, and corruption, vowing he would keep the social
programs as well.
The incumbent
president blamed the Brazilian Social Democracy Party for the crisis with water
in Sao Paulo: the country’s largest city is running low on water, and Rousseff
stated that the state government run by Neves’s party was responsible for it.
"Such a lack of planning in the richest state in the
country is shameful," she said, as quoted by Reuters.
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Texto completo en: http://actualidad.rt.com/actualidad/view/144946-uruguay-elecciones-resultados-tabare-vazquez
Texto completo en: http://actualidad.rt.com/actualidad/view/144946-uruguay-elecciones-resultados-tabare-vazquez
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