Analysis-Turnout key for Lula to clinch Brazil election in first round
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[September 30, 2022]
By Anthony Boadle
BRASILIA (Reuters) - Brazilian presidential
front-runner Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has gained steam in the final
stretch of the campaign, opinion polls show, and could defeat incumbent
Jair Bolsonaro in the first round on Sunday – if his base shows up to
vote in full force.
Still, rising voter abstention, especially among less affluent
Brazilians who lean toward leftist Lula, could mean the election goes to
a second round. If no one among the 11 candidates gets more than 50% of
votes, excluding blank and spoiled ballots, the two front-runners -
almost certainly Lula and Bolsonaro - would go to an Oct. 30 run-off
vote.
"Lula has a real chance of winning in the first round, but abstention
will be a big challenge for his Workers Party and its allies," said
Andre Cesar of political consultancy Hold Assessoria Legislativa. He
warned that Lula's lead in opinion polls could leave some supporters
thinking their vote is unneeded.
Although voting is obligatory for most adults in Brazil, plenty incur a
minor fine for shirking the duty – especially poorer voters who face
transportation challenges or other demands on election days. The share
of absent voters has risen in recent years to 23% in 2020, when the
pandemic may have played a role.
"If turnout is good in all groups, Lula wins outright," said analyst
Rafael Cortez at Tendencias consultancy.
Not all forecasters are so sure.
Eurasia Group estimated last week a 20-25% chance of Lula winning the
election in the first round, with the odds rising as supporters for
candidates polling in low single digits switch to Lula and Bolsonaro.
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A man sits next to a graffiti of former
Brazil's President and candidate for presidential election Luiz
Inacio Lula da Silva at his campaign headquarters in Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil September 28, 2022. REUTERS/Pilar Olivares
Although traditional in-person polling shops Datafolha and IPEC have
shown Lula within the margin of error for a first-round victory,
surveys via telephone run by FSB, Ipespe and Ideia show the race
going to a second round, with Lula prevailing.
Those polling discrepancies may hinge on the accessibility of poorer
Lula supporters, who are relatively easier to reach in person and
harder to catch on the phone. The lack of a recent census has also
made it tougher for pollsters to weight their samples.
However, most agree a high turnout would be good news for Lula.
PoderData, the polling division of news website Poder360, found that
among Brazilians thinking of skipping the vote, 54% were supporters
of Lula, compared to just 22% for Bolsonaro.
"Any reduction in voter turnout will hurt Lula, because low-income
voters are more likely to stay out of the election, and that could
ruin his outright victory scenario," said Cortez.
That said, Cortez flagged that Lula enters the final stretch of the
election with voter support apparently on par with that enjoyed in
the 1990s by former President Fernando Henrique Cardoso, who won two
terms outright in first-round voting.
(Reporting by Anthony Boadle; Additional reporting by Eduardo Simoes
in Sao Paulo; Editing by Brad Haynes and Rosalba O'Brien)
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