Showing posts with label Brazilian elections. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brazilian elections. Show all posts

Thursday, 30 September 2010

Jose Serra urges Brazil to back him in elections


Jose Serra has urged Brazilian voters to back him on Sunday, 3rd October. During the final rally, in the Sao Paulo district where he grew up, Serra called on his supporters to work to the end to win over voters and take the presidential contest into a second round.

Serra, a former health minister and Sao Paulo governor, is trailing behind Workers Party candidate Dilma Rousseff, whose popularity has taken a dive after corruption allegations surfaced involving a former aide, but she could still be on course to win outright on 3rd October. Speaking at the rally Serra, of the Social Democratic Party (PSDB), said that his government would be fair, ethical and free from scandal.

"We can have an ethical government. A government that focuses on the people and not on party politics and select groups. We want a government that is focused on all our fellow citizens," he said.

According to the opinion polls if the election does go to a second round on 31st October, Rousseff is expected to win. Rousseff and Serra will come face to face on Thursday [30th September] night for the final televised debate. Marina Silva of the Green Party and Plinio de Arruda Sampaio of the Socialism and Freedom Party (PSOL) will also take part.

Source: BBC News

For more news and expert analysis about Brazil, please see Brazil Focus.

Monday, 13 September 2010

Brazil: pre-election Sunday


Brazil is feverishly gearing up for the elections, which will be held in three weeks time on Sunday 3rd October. On that day the Presidency of the Republic, all 513 Chamber of Deputies seats, and 54 of the 81 Federal Senate seats will be contested, as well the governorships and state legislatures off all 26 states plus the Federal District of Brasilia. If necessary a second round will be held on 31st October, in case the candidate for either President or Governor fails to win more than half of the valid votes.

Brazilian elections are almost ideology-free and have a lot more to do with the individual candidates than with the party they represent. Indeed, the majority of the voters quickly forget which party a candidate stood for because so many of them tend to switch parties as soon as they are elected. Brazilian elections – particularly for the Chamber of Deputies – tend to be won by the more charismatic and popular candidates. This is because the sheer scale of the country, and its 100 million dispersed voters, means that television and advertising are essential for a successful campaign. Because campaigns tend to be expensive fundraising is vital for most candidates.

Hundreds of poor working-class Brazilians are paid to support a particular campaign. While the middle class supporters are more laid back, the poor cluster in groups of 5-10 waving flags and drawing attention to the mobile posters of their designated candidate. Each flag or poster has the candidate’s photograph and name, and a unique number. Therefore, for example, Dilma Rousseff - who is standing for the ruling PT as President Lula’s successor - is 13 while her main opponent Jose Serra is 45. For the much more junior Chamber of Deputies candidates it is a five figure number of which the first identifies the party - so all PT candidates begin with the number 1, the democrats of the DEM with the number 2; PSDB with 4, and so on.

The advantage of this numerical system is that all the voters – many of whom in the rural areas are still illiterate - are able to select their chosen candidate by their number. And then a few hours later – because of the miracle of Brazil’s very sophisticated electronic voting system which uses solar power in the remote Amazon so every vote can be counted and transmitted to the electoral authorities – everyone in Brazil will know if, as expected, Dilma has romped to victory in the presidential contest, and who of the thousands of local candidates has been elected to office.

For more news and expert analysis about Brazil, please see Brazil Focus.

© 2010 Menas Associates

Friday, 10 September 2010

Brazil: Election campaign momentum


José Serra's campaign is not doing well. He is trying to do in 40 days what PSDB failed to do in eight years of Lula's tenure. Serra's original assumption was that, given Lula's tremendous and unshakeable popularity, he should not criticise the president's performancebut focus on Dilma Rousseff.

Since Lula has adroitly managed to convince most of the electorate that Rousseff's tenure as president would be a mere formality, and a continuation of his own – and indeed that he would remain as president in all but name – it follows that Serra should attack Lula himself.

However, in the states the parties in Serra's coalition (PSDB-DEM-PPS) are blithely ignoring him. Tradition and ethics demand that the candidates for governor, senator, federal, and state deputy positions advertise the presidential contender in addition to themselves, but this is not happening. By contrast, Rousseff's campaign is blessed by Lula's appearance every time.

As the campaign unfolds, Rousseff has acquired self-assurance in live TV interviews, where she tries to underline both continuity with Lula's government and her own capacity for governing Brazil. Serra had been using the argument of his record of experience, but Rousseff is asserting her own experience.

For more news and expert analysis about Brazil, please see Brazil Focus.

© 2010 Menas Associates

Friday, 27 August 2010

Notes on Global Governance: A Brazilian Perspective


A month before the presidential elections due to take place on 3rd October 2010, Brazil finds itself at a cross-roads. The most likely winner of these elections is Dilma Rousseff, President Lula's former Chief of Staff, whose candidacy was created by Lula himself. It is a foregone conclusion that, if she wins – by a landslide in the first ballot, as expected – Lula will in fact continue to govern for another four years (2010-14), if not eight. The Brazilian people will in fact be voting for Lula, through Dilma as an intermediary. Thus, it is easy to appreciate the importance of Dilma's campaign slogan: continuity. And yet while Lula's system of government continues to prevail in Brazil, the rest of the world will move and change. It is important to reflect on Brazil's position within this dynamic context.

For the first time in Brazilian elections, foreign policy is part of the electoral campaign. Lula has exercised this policy at his will, under the near-imperial powers granted to the president under the constitution. However, Lula has never understood the difference between the state and the government, and the foreign policy of his administration has been that of his political party, PT (the Workers' Party), heavily ideological in content, and often questioned by the opposition and a large portion of the business community, academia and the media. Particularly distasteful to these groups are Lula's embrace of tyrannical regimes, and his inexplicable failure to sanction their gross human rights violations. Lula enjoys an extraordinary popularity rating (75 per cent) after his nearly eight years in office, thanks to his charisma and his uncanny, intuitive communication with the common people. These same qualities propelled him to a prestigious position on the international scene, but it is his persona – his rags-to-riches story, the exploit of a humble lathe operator rising to presidency of the fifth largest world economy – that has impressed foreign audiences and international organisations, and not his ideas, some of which are highly aspirant and idealistic like the fight against hunger, a programme that in Brazil itself has failed completely.

It is undeniable that Lula, thanks to his proactive diplomacy, has generated a much higher level of exposure for Brazil among international decision-makers. Occasionally, though due to his self over-estimation and lack of understanding of complex historical issues, this has led to disasters, such a botched attempt at Middle East mediation, yet they seem to leave him unperturbed. However, this kind of highly personalised presidential diplomacy, which favours form over content – often ignoring Brazil's very professional foreign service – is unique to Lula, and cannot be replicated. It certainly will not be emulated by Dilma Rousseff, a pallid technocrat who feels uncomfortable with the vagaries of domestic politics, let alone the international variety.

Dilma will have to confront the challenges of globalisation, and (if PT party lets her) it is probable that the foreign service will resume its position of controlling and implementing foreign policy. Lula had placed Brazil on a privileged situation, first in the G-8 (as part of the Outreach 5, with the Heiligendamm process), then in the G-20. The obsolescence and decline of the United Nations; Brazil's inability (for the past 65 years) to secure a permanent seat on the Security Council, an aspiration for which the Lula government made heavy sacrifices; the failure to bear fruit of “strategic partnerships” launched with China, India and Africa when it came to the crunch; the growing irrelevancy of UN and regional specialised agencies, incapable of modernising themselves to face new times; all of these factors, and others, led Brazil under Lula to seek new alliances in informal groupings such as the BRICs (Brazil Russia India and China) and IBSA (India, Brazil, South Africa), to cultivate a South-South relationship and to strengthen ties with Arab and African countries.All of these initiatives, quite costly to the Brazilian taxpayer, have not had an impact on global governance.

Under Lula, Brazil has created many expectations in the Latin American region, Africa and the world at large. So far, they remain largely unrequited. Rhetoric in the G-20 has not been followed by action. The president's vibrant personality has not had an impact of an international scale. However, two achievements stand out: Brazil's role in maintaining stability in Haiti. And the commitment made at the COP-15 Copenhagen conference of December 2009 to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions (GHG). Aside from the aforementioned, Brazil's diplomatic successes on the world stage are largely theoretical. Yet there is no doubt that the country is now a major player on global governance. This in itself is commendable, but the fact remains that given a rostrum from which to address mankind there has to be concrete, viable proposals aiming at peace, security and sustainable development. It remains to be seen if Dilma Rousseff's government will be able to avail itself of the opportunity, created by Lula, to make a significant contribution.

For more news and expert analysis about Brazil, please see Brazil Focus.

© 2010 Menas Associates

Thursday, 26 August 2010

Commentary: Brazil's presidential election


To the extent that polls can be relied upon, the three largest polling organizations in Brazil concur that the Partido dos Trabalhadores' (PT) Dilma Rousseff has indeed a significant and widening edge over the Brazilian Social Democracy Party's (PSDB) José Serra. Her victory in the first ballot is at this stage probable, but by no means a shoo-in. Surprises can happen.

Serra has, however, run a lukewarm campaign, in part due to his personality and in part owing to his fractious coalition, whereas from day one outgoing President Lula embraced Dilma as his heiress apparent, leaving no doubt that he would remain in control during her tenure. Given his astonishing popularity ratings (75 per cent), Serra avoided confronting him. It was a duel between Lula's raw charisma and Serra's pallid accounts of his government experience, about which nobody cared.

A refurbished and embellished Dilma performed well on TV and in debates, where Serra had expected to crush her. This did not happen. Unless Serra becomes more aggressive in the remaining month, he will have lost the campaign and the presidency. The Green Party's Marina Silva trails with 8 per cent, and it is possible that some of her votes would accrue to Serra in a run-off – if there is one.

For more news and expert analysis about Brazil, please see Brazil Focus.

© 2010 Menas Associates