RIO DE JANEIRO – Brazilian voters electing a new president this weekend are being asked to decide what scares them least: the incumbent’s warnings about the “ghosts of the past,” or her challenger’s charges about the “monsters of the present.”
The latest polls give left-leaning incumbent Dilma Rousseff a slight edge in Sunday’s runoff vote to lead the world’s fifth-largest nation. But few people are counting out centre-right challenger Aecio Neves after a topsy-turvy campaign that has been the most competitive, divisive and dramatic since Brazil’s return to democracy in 1985.
READ MORE: Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff to face challenger in second-round vote
“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,” said Carlos Pereira, a political analyst at the Gertulio Vargas Foundation, Brazil’s leading think-tank . “The candidate who convinces voters he or she is best prepared to combine these two beliefs and make them complementary will win Sunday’s election.”
The race turned dramatic after Eduardo Campos, a main opposition candidate, was killed when his campaign plane crashed in August. His running mate, renowned environmentalist Marina Silva, was thrust into his spot, and she immediately jumped to a double-digit lead over Rousseff and Neves.
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Silva initially tapped into the discontent over poor public services that millions of Brazilians expressed in anti-government protests last year, but her campaign never found its feet and voters drifted away from her within weeks. That opened the gap for Neves to stage his surprisingly strong showing in the Oct. 5 first-round vote, coming in second and forcing Rousseff into a runoff when her first-place finish didn’t get an absolute majority.
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The campaigns hit fever pitch in the three weeks since, with the Workers’ Party that’s been in power for 12 years and Neves’ Social Democracy Party that last held the presidency in 1995-2003 battling it out with no shortage of verbal jabs and nasty allegations.
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Rousseff attacked her rival with campaign ads asking Brazilians to remember the “ghosts of the past” when Neves’ party ruled, with much of the nation mired in poverty, unemployment rife, and consumers crippled by hyperinflation. The incumbent has emphasized the deep social gains made under the Workers’ Party, whose expansive social welfare programs helped yank millions out of poverty and into the middle class and have kept unemployment at historic lows.
Neves urged voters to look at “monsters of the present,” including an economic recession, inflation that’s floated above the government’s 6.5 per cent target, and allegations that the Workers’ Party was involved in an apparent decade-long, billion-dollar kickback scheme at state-run oil company Petrobras.
Polls suggest Rousseff re-election
The latest results from Brazil’s two most respected polling groups put Rousseff ahead of Neves. A Datafolha survey released Thursday had Rousseff leading Neves 53 per cent to 47 per cent, with an error margin of two percentage points. An Ibope Institute poll put the president’s lead 54-46, with the same error margin.
“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,” said Ana Paula Marinho, a nurse who lives in the Pavao-Pavaozinho favela that sits above Copacabana’s ornate apartments. “We can see that we’ve got a better future with Dilma.”
But Patricia Botelha, who lives on a leafy street in Rio’s wealthy Ipanema neighbourhood, said Rousseff’s poor management had led Brazil’s economy to weak growth and all Brazilians will pay the price if the country doesn’t rebound soon. While she voted for the Workers’ Party in the last three elections, this year she’s casting a ballot for Neves.
“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,” Botelha said. “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.”
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Associated Press writer Stan Lehman in Sao Paulo contributed to this report.
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