Thousands turn out for final rallies ahead of polarised Brazil vote


Regional Electoral Tribunal officials arrive at the Bela Vista do Jaraqui community, on the Negro River, Brazil, with electronic voting machines ahead of today’s election. – EPA pic, October 2, 2022.

FAR-RIGHT incumbent Jair Bolsonaro and leftist front-runner Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva attracted thousands of supporters to their final campaign rallies yesterday in a last-ditch bid for votes on the eve of Brazil’s polarising presidential election.

Bolsonaro, the 67-year-old president known for his gloves-off style, led one of his trademark motorcycle rallies from the north side of Sao Paulo to the city’s Ibirapuera park.

He grinned and waved at the head of a battalion of bikers decked out in black leather and the yellow and green of the flag as the crowd chanted: “Lula, thief, your place is in prison!”

About 5km from there, Lula, the 76-year-old ex-president who left office in 2010 with an unprecedented 87% approval rating, held his own rally on the economic capital’s main avenue, Avenida Paulista.

A sea of red-clad supporters waved banners ranging from “Lula 2022” to the rainbow-colored LGBTQ pride flag, shouting: “Jair, time to go!”

In line with campaigning rules, neither man addressed their supporters. Both rallies dispersed without incident.

With the country deeply divided, tension is running high heading into today’s election, which Lula is gunning to win outright, without the need for a run-off on October 30.

A poll from the Datafolha institute released yesterday put the charismatic but tarnished leftist on the cusp of a first-round win, with 50% of valid votes to 37% for Bolsonaro.

To win outright, he would need 50% plus one vote.

Another poll published yesterday by the Ipec institute found similar numbers: 51% for Lula to 37% for Bolsonaro.

The latter has repeatedly signalled he could challenge an election loss, saying “only God” can remove him from office and alleging, without evidence, fraud in Brazil’s electronic voting system.

“We’re going to win in the first round – 64% of the vote,” Bolsonaro’s congressman son Eduardo said at yesterday’s rally, repeating his father’s claims that polls showing Lula in the lead are fake.

Former metalworker Lula, who governed Brazil from 2003 to 2010, said on Friday he feared the incumbent would create “turmoil” if he lost.

Some fear a possible Brazilian version of the unrest that rocked the United States last year after Bolsonaro’s political role model, Donald Trump, refused to accept electoral defeat.

“You always have to brace for trouble with Bolsonaro – he’s capable of anything,” 52-year-old retiree Anderson Momesso told AFP at the Lula rally.

However, 29-year-old teacher Ully Kotler said she was confident the “complete tragedy” of Bolsonaro’s government had left him so isolated that “all he can do is stomp his feet and threaten a coup – it won’t go much beyond that.”

Bolsonaro’s popularity has been dented by a weak economy and his chaotic management of Covid-19.

‘Best president ever’

Yet his backers ardently defend Bolsonaro’s record.

“Four years isn’t much time to fix all the things our governments did wrong in the past,” 54-year-old Isabel de Morais said, who runs a clothing store and wore a green T-shirt marked “Freedom”.

“Bolsonaro is the best president we’ve ever had.”

Others welcomed the incumbent’s defence of conservative, Christian values.

“If Lula wins, he’ll just go back to the scene of the crime and keep stealing,” added domestic worker Laudiceia Saraiva, 46, in an allusion to the former president’s graft conviction, since overturned.

Security has been tight around both candidates, who rarely campaigned without bulletproof vests, after Bolsonaro was stabbed at a rally during his successful 2018 electoral race.

The campaign homestretch descended into mudslinging on Thursday when Lula and Bolsonaro traded insults in their final presidential debate.

Bolsonaro wasted no time pouncing on the controversial corruption charges that have long dogged Lula, who in turn branded his rival an unashamed liar.

The incumbent president received a last-minute endorsement on Saturday from Hungary’s right-wing Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who described him as an “exceptional” president in a video Bolsonaro posted on Twitter. – AFP, October 2, 2022.


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