Explainer-What is driving tensions ahead of Brazil's presidential
election?
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[September 19, 2022]
By Anthony Boadle
BRASILIA (Reuters) - Brazil will hold the
most polarized presidential election in decades next month, with many
expecting incumbent President Jair Bolsonaro to contest the result if he
is defeated by former leftist President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, as
polls suggest.
ELECTRONIC VOTING
Brazil adopted electronic voting machines in 1996 to end widespread
fraud involving paper ballots. After winning political office in a dozen
elections using the current voting system, Bolsonaro ramped up his
criticism last year as opinion surveys showed him on track to lose
re-election.
He has repeatedly asserted that the machines are open to tampering, but
he has produced no evidence of fraud.
He has also attacked the Supreme Court justices sitting on the Supreme
Electoral Tribunal (TSE) for defending the electronic system and claimed
they could rig it to favor Lula.
International voting experts and electoral officials say the technology
is secure, with no cases of fraud detected.
THIN PAPER TRAIL
Still, some election experts say the lack of a paper record for each
vote does limit opportunities to conduct audits if the election is
contested.
Voters punch their choices into electronic voting machines at 477,000
voting stations across Brazil. A paper receipt of each machine's total
is signed by officials and displayed publicly in each polling place.
The digital results of each machine are put on pen drives and sent via
secure connection for centralized tabulation at TSE headquarters in
Brasilia.
Last year, Congress voted down Bolsonaro's proposal to reintroduce a
paper record for each vote cast.
TRUMP MODEL
Some of Bolsonaro's supporters last year tried to occupy the Supreme
Court, inspired by the 2021 assault on the U.S. Capitol by backers of
former President Donald Trump.
Bolsonaro echoed Trump's baseless fraud claims after the 2020 U.S.
election, and he was one of the last world leaders to recognize
President Joe Biden's victory.
Many observers worry Bolsonaro could take a similar approach if he loses
next month.
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Former Brazilian President and
presidential candidate Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, and his wife
Rosangela Da Silva gesture as he holds the Brazilian flag with
Roberto Requiao, candidate for state governor of Parana, during a
rally in Curitiba, Brazil, September 17, 2022. REUTERS/Rodolfo
Buhrer
'MY ARMY'
Bolsonaro, a former army captain, has added to institutional
tensions by blurring the lines between his government and the armed
forces. He has referred to the military as "my army" and told
rallying supporters it is "on our side."
Bolsonaro has also handed out a record number of jobs to current and
former military officers in his government, including key roles in
his cabinet.
However, leaders of the armed forces offer private assurances to
former peers that they want no part in disrupting democratic order,
according to a half dozen former officials with close ties to
military leadership.
Political and defense analysts largely agree that Brazil's military
lost its appetite for politics after the 1964-1985 dictatorship that
eroded the prestige of the armed forces.
Unlike the 1964 military takeover, Brazil's business elites,
churches and mainstream media are not calling for political
intervention by the armed forces.
FOREIGN OBSERVERS
Bracing for trouble, electoral authorities have invited a record
number foreign organizations to send observer missions and vouch for
the integrity of the elections.
For the first time, two U.S.-based organizations, the International
Foundation for Electoral Systems (IFES), a non-partisan, non-profit
group, and the Carter Center, a non-profit set up by former
President Jimmy Carter, are sending missions to observe Brazil's
elections.
The Carter Center said its electoral expert mission would assess the
transparency and functioning of the electronic voting system but
would not inspect the technology nor provide an overall assessment
of the counting processes.
The TSE also invited the European Union to send election observers,
but the Bolsonaro government vetoed the proposal.
(Reporting by Anthony Boadle; Editing by Brad Haynes and Ross
Colvin)
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