Posts tagged with "Politics"

The Brazilian elections are coming up in October, and along with senators, congressmen, and governors, this election will also decide the nation’s new president, ending Lula’s eight year term in office. Today we’re going to take a look at the presidential candidates. Keep your eyes on the news this weekend, since the first round of voting takes place on Sunday. The winning candidate will need a majority in order to avoid a final round of voting on October 31st.

Dilma Rousseff

The daughter of a Bulgarian immigrant and a schoolteacher, Dilma was raised in Minas Gerais and is a trained economist. She was an active member of the left wing resistance against the military dictatorship in the late 1960s and early 70s, and was arrested, imprisoned, and tortured by the regime. After her release, she studied in Rio Grande do Sul, and then began her political career there working in the state capital. She quickly advanced through the ranks, and became State Secretary of Energy in 1990, and thirteen years later, she became the National Secretary of Energy working for President Lula in Brasilia. She became Lula’s chief of staff in 2005, and left this year to begin her run for president, just a year after surviving early-stage lymphoma. As a member of the Worker’s Party and Lula’s hand-picked successor, she has pulled ahead in the polls and is expected to win the elections, most likely in the second round of voting.

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José Serra

Second in the running is the seasoned São Paulo politician, also the child of a European immigrant (his father hailed from Italy). He studied engineering at the University of São Paulo, and also received a Masters in Economics from the University of Chile and Cornell, where he also received a Ph.D. He also studied at Princeton, and then taught economics at the University of Campinas. He began his political career as the São Paulo State Secretary for Economics and Planning, and later became the mayor and then governor of São Paulo. He’s running for the Brazilian Social Democratic Party, but has been lagging in the polls.

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Marina Silva

Marina Silva was born in the Northwest state of Acre, where she was raised in an impoverished community of Amazonian rubber tappers. Her parents died when she was young, and she moved to the state capital as a teenager to work and to get an education. She graduated from college at age 26, and became a political activist, working with Chico Mendes to protest against destruction of the Amazon rainforest. She became a city councilwoman in 1988, and then became a national senator in 1994. She worked as the National Minister of the Environment from 2003 to 2008, working alongside Lula and Dilma. She was a former member of the Worker’s Party, but is now running for the Green Party. She is a distant third in the polls, but could potentially pull critical votes away from Serra and Dilma in the first round of voting.

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With just a couple of weeks until elections, I still don’t know who I’m going to vote for as president, but one of the candidates I hadn’t even considered who continues to impress me in the presidential debates, is Plínio de Arruda Sampaio, who is the candidade for PSOL (Partido Socialismo e Liberdade), who is 80 years old, and a long shot at winning the race, but I think because of this, he’s not afraid to call the other candidates out on their mistakes, continues to alert the public we need to know who we’re voting for and to make responsible decisions… and he’s quite funny and was my entertainment in last night’s debate.

Check out video of Plínio de Arruda encouraging the public to use Twitter!

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What is Plínio telling us about how Twitter is a useful tool for elections?

This will be my first time voting in a presidential election in Brazil, and I must say, I’m not as excited as I wish I’d be.  Personally, I’m not crazy about any of the likely candidates…  But political opinion aside, it’s still pretty fun to keep track of and read up on what candidates have to say!  And in the spirit of Colombia’s intense presidential elections yesterday, I thought that until the elections, we can talk about them a little bit.

Let’s start off with a blog post from Eleições 2010.net on the matter, shall we?

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Uma história ficcional geralmente é divida em três atos: início, desenvolvimento e conclusão. A corrida presidencial deste ano parece seguir um script sem precedentes, com uma parte só sem definição: seu final, que ocorrerá após a população brasileira, em outubro, eleger novo representante para o país.

Ano passado, José Serra (PSDB), ex-governador de São Paulo e pré-candidato à presidência da República, estava muitos pontos à frente de Dilma Rousseff (PT), ex-ministra da Casa Civil, nas várias pesquisas eleitorais. Nas últimas semanas, porém, a diferença tem diminuído e de tanto isso acontecer, eis que o instituto CNT/Sensus já indicava a petista líder na disputa, embora o empate técnico seja o constatado.

Desta vez, a pesquisa Datafolha também assinala a mesma característica: 37% para cada um. Segundo o portal de notícias G1, estudo divulgado em 17 de abril indicou o tucano com 42% das intenções entre os eleitores, enquanto Dilma tinha em suas mãos somente 30%. Marina Silva (PV), terceira preferida pela população, manteve os mesmos 12 pontos percentuais constatados há um mês.

Será que Serra manterá o discurso de os “números reais são aqueles registrados nas urnas eletrônicas”? Até lá a novela poderá ter seu fim, mesmo antes de ele chegar.

Vale ressaltar que a margem de erros na pesquisa Datafolha é de dois pontos, para mais ou para menos.

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What does the post tell us about the candidates?  Is it a close race or not so  much?  If so, who’s all tied up?

This year is a presidential election year in Brazil, and I’ve been playing around with this tool that the brokerage firm Souza Barros put together, called BOVAP (Bolsa de Valores Políticos) to help Brazilians learn more about their politicians.  Watch the video below to see how it works and then try to answer some of the questions below the video, and let me know what you think of the initiative and if you’d like to play!

1. What popular notion is BOVAP trying to end?

2. What market’s logic does the tool use?

3. What do you buy and sell on BOVAP?

4. What is the currency the tool uses called?

Answers after the break

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