Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Rousseff narrowly wins Brazil re-election

-

Brazilians narrowly voted leftist President Dilma Rousseff back into office on Sunday after a virulent election campaign that split Latin America's biggest economy between poor north and richer south.

Rousseff, Brazil's first woman president, went into the run-off contest as slight favorite and defeated center-right challenger Aecio Neves by around three million votes.

With 99 percent of votes counted, she had won a 51.52 percent vote share to 48.48 percent to Neves, the business world favorite.

"Thankyou very much," Rousseff, 66, tweeted as it became clear she had won.

The race to lead the world's seventh-largest economy was seen as a referendum on 12 years of government by the Workers' Party (PT) -- eight under working-class hero Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and four under Rousseff, with voters weighing the PT's social legacy against Neves's promise of economic revival.

The bitterness of the campaign, the most vitriolic since democracy was restored in 1985 after two decades of military rule, threatens to leave the country sorely divided.

The PT endeared itself to the masses with landmark social programs that have lifted millions from poverty, increased wages and brought unemployment to a record-low 4.9 percent.

But the outlook has darkened since Rousseff first took office in 2010, the year economic growth peaked at 7.5 percent.

She has presided over rising inflation and a recession this year, amid protests against corruption, record spending on the World Cup and poor public education, health care and transport.

- 'More equal' Brazil -

Social Democrat presidential candidate Aecio Neves speaks after voting in the run-off election in Be...
Social Democrat presidential candidate Aecio Neves speaks after voting in the run-off election in Belo Holizonte, Brazil, on October 26, 2014
Yasuyoshi Chiba, AFP

Neves vowed to reboot the economy with market-friendly policies while safeguarding the PT's social programs.

But Rousseff's supporters cast him as a fat cat who will govern for the upper class and that view looked to have prevailed, Mark Weisbrot of the US Center for Economic and Policy Research told AFP, saying Neves' more liberal plans would not have guaranteed badly needed investment.

"It may seem like 'the markets' are demanding such things, but if they ever got them, they would not react well at all," said Weisbrot, citing the experience of the Eurozone, where "the markets" had demanded austerity.

"The resulting triple-dip recession did not attract investment -- rather it repelled investment," Weisbrot said.

Rousseff cast her ballot in Porto Alegre, the southern city where she grew up.

"We are voting for a more equal Brazil with more opportunities," Rousseff said.

Neves, 54, gave V for victory signs as he cast his ballot in Belo Horizonte, where he served two terms as governor of Minas Gerais state, insisting that "change has already begun."

- Corruption issue -

Supporters of Brazilian President and presidential candidate for the Workers Party  Dilma Rousseff  ...
Supporters of Brazilian President and presidential candidate for the Workers Party, Dilma Rousseff, celebrate in Brasilia on October 26, 2014
Evaristo Sa, AFP

Despite support for her social policies, Rousseff has been hit by corruption scandals, especially a multi-billion-dollar embezzlement scheme implicating dozens of politicians -- mainly her allies -- at state-owned oil giant Petrobras.

As the fiery campaign wrapped up, conservative news magazine Veja quoted a suspect in the case as saying Rousseff and Lula personally knew of the scam -- a claim the president vehemently denied.

But the issue will dog her, said independent consultant Andre Cesar.

"If the allegations are confirmed that could spark a political crisis," Cesar told AFP.

The graft issue swayed some, but not others.

"I am voting for Neves. We are fed up with corruption scandals," Roberto Carlos da Silva, a 34-year-old doctor in a chic Sao Paulo suburb, told AFP.

People queue at a polling station in Mare  a complex of favelas in Rio de Janeiro  Brazil  on Octobe...
People queue at a polling station in Mare, a complex of favelas in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on October 26, 2014
Vanderlei Almeida, AFP

But civil servant Maria de Fatima de Oliveira Borges from Brasilia said: "I'm voting for the PT because I believe in its project of social change."

The campaign has been a fierce battle for Rousseff, a former guerrilla once jailed and tortured for fighting the country's 1964-1985 military regime.

First, she had to fend off environmentalist Marina Silva, who exited the first round three weeks ago with 21 percent of the vote to 42 percent for Rousseff and 34 percent for Neves.

Silva then endorsed Neves, whose comeback briefly lifted him into first place -- and prompted a furious Rousseff counter-attack.

She accused Neves of nepotism as Minas Gerais governor and played up a report that he once hit his then-girlfriend in public.

Supporters of re-elected President Dilma Rousseff celebrate in Brasilia on October 26  2014
Supporters of re-elected President Dilma Rousseff celebrate in Brasilia on October 26, 2014
Evaristo Sa, AFP

Neves, the grandson of the man elected Brazil's first post-dictatorship president, responded by accusing Rousseff of lying and "collusion" in the Petrobras kickbacks.

As well as their president, voters also elected governors in run-offs in 14 states, with Luiz Fernando Pezao of the Brazilian Democratic Movement Party (PMDB) -- a Rousseff coalition ally -- winning in Rio de Janeiro.

Nationwide 281 people were arrested for election-related "irregularities" -- one for taking a "selfie" in the poll booth in Sao Paulo state, while two buses were set on fire in the same state.

Profile of Dilma Rousseff
Profile of Dilma Rousseff
Gustavo Izús, jfs/arc, AFP graphic

Brazilians narrowly voted leftist President Dilma Rousseff back into office on Sunday after a virulent election campaign that split Latin America’s biggest economy between poor north and richer south.

Rousseff, Brazil’s first woman president, went into the run-off contest as slight favorite and defeated center-right challenger Aecio Neves by around three million votes.

With 99 percent of votes counted, she had won a 51.52 percent vote share to 48.48 percent to Neves, the business world favorite.

“Thankyou very much,” Rousseff, 66, tweeted as it became clear she had won.

The race to lead the world’s seventh-largest economy was seen as a referendum on 12 years of government by the Workers’ Party (PT) — eight under working-class hero Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and four under Rousseff, with voters weighing the PT’s social legacy against Neves’s promise of economic revival.

The bitterness of the campaign, the most vitriolic since democracy was restored in 1985 after two decades of military rule, threatens to leave the country sorely divided.

The PT endeared itself to the masses with landmark social programs that have lifted millions from poverty, increased wages and brought unemployment to a record-low 4.9 percent.

But the outlook has darkened since Rousseff first took office in 2010, the year economic growth peaked at 7.5 percent.

She has presided over rising inflation and a recession this year, amid protests against corruption, record spending on the World Cup and poor public education, health care and transport.

– ‘More equal’ Brazil –

Social Democrat presidential candidate Aecio Neves speaks after voting in the run-off election in Be...

Social Democrat presidential candidate Aecio Neves speaks after voting in the run-off election in Belo Holizonte, Brazil, on October 26, 2014
Yasuyoshi Chiba, AFP

Neves vowed to reboot the economy with market-friendly policies while safeguarding the PT’s social programs.

But Rousseff’s supporters cast him as a fat cat who will govern for the upper class and that view looked to have prevailed, Mark Weisbrot of the US Center for Economic and Policy Research told AFP, saying Neves’ more liberal plans would not have guaranteed badly needed investment.

“It may seem like ‘the markets’ are demanding such things, but if they ever got them, they would not react well at all,” said Weisbrot, citing the experience of the Eurozone, where “the markets” had demanded austerity.

“The resulting triple-dip recession did not attract investment — rather it repelled investment,” Weisbrot said.

Rousseff cast her ballot in Porto Alegre, the southern city where she grew up.

“We are voting for a more equal Brazil with more opportunities,” Rousseff said.

Neves, 54, gave V for victory signs as he cast his ballot in Belo Horizonte, where he served two terms as governor of Minas Gerais state, insisting that “change has already begun.”

– Corruption issue –

Supporters of Brazilian President and presidential candidate for the Workers Party  Dilma Rousseff  ...

Supporters of Brazilian President and presidential candidate for the Workers Party, Dilma Rousseff, celebrate in Brasilia on October 26, 2014
Evaristo Sa, AFP

Despite support for her social policies, Rousseff has been hit by corruption scandals, especially a multi-billion-dollar embezzlement scheme implicating dozens of politicians — mainly her allies — at state-owned oil giant Petrobras.

As the fiery campaign wrapped up, conservative news magazine Veja quoted a suspect in the case as saying Rousseff and Lula personally knew of the scam — a claim the president vehemently denied.

But the issue will dog her, said independent consultant Andre Cesar.

“If the allegations are confirmed that could spark a political crisis,” Cesar told AFP.

The graft issue swayed some, but not others.

“I am voting for Neves. We are fed up with corruption scandals,” Roberto Carlos da Silva, a 34-year-old doctor in a chic Sao Paulo suburb, told AFP.

People queue at a polling station in Mare  a complex of favelas in Rio de Janeiro  Brazil  on Octobe...

People queue at a polling station in Mare, a complex of favelas in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on October 26, 2014
Vanderlei Almeida, AFP

But civil servant Maria de Fatima de Oliveira Borges from Brasilia said: “I’m voting for the PT because I believe in its project of social change.”

The campaign has been a fierce battle for Rousseff, a former guerrilla once jailed and tortured for fighting the country’s 1964-1985 military regime.

First, she had to fend off environmentalist Marina Silva, who exited the first round three weeks ago with 21 percent of the vote to 42 percent for Rousseff and 34 percent for Neves.

Silva then endorsed Neves, whose comeback briefly lifted him into first place — and prompted a furious Rousseff counter-attack.

She accused Neves of nepotism as Minas Gerais governor and played up a report that he once hit his then-girlfriend in public.

Supporters of re-elected President Dilma Rousseff celebrate in Brasilia on October 26  2014

Supporters of re-elected President Dilma Rousseff celebrate in Brasilia on October 26, 2014
Evaristo Sa, AFP

Neves, the grandson of the man elected Brazil’s first post-dictatorship president, responded by accusing Rousseff of lying and “collusion” in the Petrobras kickbacks.

As well as their president, voters also elected governors in run-offs in 14 states, with Luiz Fernando Pezao of the Brazilian Democratic Movement Party (PMDB) — a Rousseff coalition ally — winning in Rio de Janeiro.

Nationwide 281 people were arrested for election-related “irregularities” — one for taking a “selfie” in the poll booth in Sao Paulo state, while two buses were set on fire in the same state.

Profile of Dilma Rousseff

Profile of Dilma Rousseff
Gustavo Izús, jfs/arc, AFP graphic

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

World

The world's biggest economy grew 1.6 percent in the first quarter, the Commerce Department said.

Business

Electric cars from BYD, which topped Tesla as the world's top seller of EVs in last year's fourth quarter, await export at a Chinese...

World

NGOs allege the loan is financing the Suralaya coal plant, which is being expanded to ten units - Copyright AFP/File BAY ISMOYOGreen NGOs have...

World

Copyright POOL/AFP Mark SchiefelbeinShaun TANDONUS Secretary of State Antony Blinken called Thursday on the United States and China to manage their differences “responsibly” as...