π§π· The focus of the worldβs attention is on the presidential elections in Brazil.
After all, the question βwho will be president of Brazilβ is by no means an idle one. It concerns the country's further development, the direction of its foreign policy, its positioning in the international arena in the light of Brazil's upcoming G20 chairmanship in 2024, the country's role in the UN and especially in its Security Council, where in 2022-2023 Brazil remains as a non-permanent member.
The main struggle flared up between the two main rivals, who expectedly made it to the second round β the right-wing incumbent Jair Bolsonaro and the leftist Luis Inacio Lula da Silva, the country' ex-president (2003-2010).
The current race is conspicuous for having the shortest official campaign in the history of democratic elections (46 days) and the longest time gap between two rounds (28 days, usually three weeks). Analysts dubbed this period βa 28-day nightβ, hinting at the unpredictability of the outcome of this βnightβ.
The results of the 2nd round are unpredictable, but whoever becomes the winner will be a world-class leader, who will have to respond to the complex and acute challenges of the disturbing modern world, writes Valdai Club expert Lyudmila Okuneva. Lyudmila is the participant of the expert discussion on the Brazil elections held by Valdai Discussion Club on October, 6. Watch the video of the discussion here β https://go.sv/LvZpg7
https://valdaiclub.com/a/highlights/results-of-the-1st-round-of-the-general-elections/
#Norms_and_Values #Brazil #Bolsonaro #LuladaSilva
@valdai_club
After all, the question βwho will be president of Brazilβ is by no means an idle one. It concerns the country's further development, the direction of its foreign policy, its positioning in the international arena in the light of Brazil's upcoming G20 chairmanship in 2024, the country's role in the UN and especially in its Security Council, where in 2022-2023 Brazil remains as a non-permanent member.
The main struggle flared up between the two main rivals, who expectedly made it to the second round β the right-wing incumbent Jair Bolsonaro and the leftist Luis Inacio Lula da Silva, the country' ex-president (2003-2010).
The current race is conspicuous for having the shortest official campaign in the history of democratic elections (46 days) and the longest time gap between two rounds (28 days, usually three weeks). Analysts dubbed this period βa 28-day nightβ, hinting at the unpredictability of the outcome of this βnightβ.
The results of the 2nd round are unpredictable, but whoever becomes the winner will be a world-class leader, who will have to respond to the complex and acute challenges of the disturbing modern world, writes Valdai Club expert Lyudmila Okuneva. Lyudmila is the participant of the expert discussion on the Brazil elections held by Valdai Discussion Club on October, 6. Watch the video of the discussion here β https://go.sv/LvZpg7
https://valdaiclub.com/a/highlights/results-of-the-1st-round-of-the-general-elections/
#Norms_and_Values #Brazil #Bolsonaro #LuladaSilva
@valdai_club
Valdai Club
Results of the First Round of the General Elections in Brazil: What's Next?
On October 2, the 1st round of general elections took place in Brazil: Brazilians voted to choose the president, the entire lower house of parliament, a third of the senate and many governors. However, the focus of the worldβs attention, without exaggerationβ¦