Print

Print


Lula's Allies Sweep Senate Race, Governorships

Earth Times 
October 4, 2010

http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/news/347161,race-governorships-summary.html

Brasilia

The coalition that backs Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula
da Silva is set to have a two-thirds majority in the Senate
and won 12 governorships in the first round of voting,
results showed Monday.

Sunday's general election was however not a complete success
for the ruling- party camp. Its presidential candidate, Dilma
Rousseff, won the first round of voting, but still must to
face off against social democrat Jose Serra in a runoff
October 31.

Lula's Workers' Party (PT) and its allies are to have 55
Senate seats beginning in January - up from their current 39,
while the opposition goes from 33 down to 22 seats and
independents shrink from 10 to four, according to a vote
count from Sunday's legislative election. Lula's allies swept
the board Sunday: Of 54 Senate seats being chosen, they won
40.

The relevance of the balance of power in the Senate will
depend on the outcome of the presidential runoff between
Rousseff and Serra.

If Rousseff wins the presidency, she will have a very
friendly Senate to work with, in line with the wishes of the
outgoing Lula. However, if Serra were to win, he would have
to govern in an unfavourable legislative setting.

Rousseff's leftist PT increased its own share from 11 to 15
senators. It is set to be the second-largest in the upper
house of the Brazilian Congress, behind its main ally, the
centrist Party of the Brazilian Democratic Movement (PMDB),
with 20 seats.

The opposition led by the Party of Brazilian Social Democracy
(PSDB), whose presidential candidate Serra managed to hold
Rousseff to a runoff, and by the conservative party
Democratas (DEM) suffered a historic defeat in the Senate
race.

The PSDB, which currently has 14 senators, will from January
have only 10, while the DEM went from 18 seats to seven.

No details were immediately available as to the make-up of
the lower house of the Brazilian Congress, for which pre-
electoral opinion polls had also given Lula and his allies a
comfortable lead.

The ruling coalition that backs Lula and Rousseff also
carried 12 of the 18 state governorships races that were
decided in Sunday's voting.

The PT got back the leadership of the state of Rio Grande do
Sul and kept Bahia, Sergipe and Acre. Its allies of the
Brazilian Socialist Party (PSB), in turn, comfortably won
Ceara, Pernambuco, Piaui and Espirito Santo.

The centrist PMDB, the PT's main ally, kept Rio de Janeiro -
Brazil's third most powerful state - and also won Maranhao,
Mato Grosso and Mato Grosso do Sul.

However, the social democratic opposition will keep command
of Brazil's two most powerful states in both political and
economic terms, Sao Paulo and Minas Gerais. They also won
Parana and Tocantins, while their allies of the DEM are to
govern the states of Rio Grande do Norte and Santa Catarina.

The state of Amazonas elected a governor of the tiny Party of
National Mobilization (PMN).

The election for governor is set to be defined in a runoff in
the remaining eight states and in the federal district of
Brasilia.

_____________________________________________

Portside aims to provide material of interest
to people on the left that will help them to
interpret the world and to change it.

Submit via email: [log in to unmask]
Submit via the Web: portside.org/submit
Frequently asked questions: portside.org/faq
Subscribe: portside.org/subscribe
Unsubscribe: portside.org/unsubscribe
Account assistance: portside.org/contact
Search the archives: portside.org/archive