Neves Will Face Incumbent Rousseff In Brazil’s Runoff Election

incumbent Dilma Rousseff will face off with right-of-center candidate Aecio Neves in a runoff election for Brazil’s presidency.

Presidential candidate Dilma Rousseff in Belo Horizonte, Brazil.

With more than 86 percent of the votes tallied, Rousseff has 40.53 percent of valid votes, Brazil’s election authority says; she would need to win more than 50 percent of votes to win outright and avoid a runoff.

Neves, who was the third-ranking candidate in opinion polls earlier in the campaign, has 34.83 percent of the partial tally. NPR’s South America correspondent Lourdes Garcia-Navarro, reporting for our Newscast division, notes that Neves’ grandfather, Tancredo Neves, was a much-loved politician “who fought Brazil’s dictatorship but died before he could assume the presidency, to which he had been appointed.”

Marina Silva, shown here in Rio de Janeiro on Wednesday, is tied in polls with incumbent President Dilma Rousseff. Silva, the candidate for Brazil's Socialist Party, says if elected next month, she would be the first social environmentalist president.

With 21.01 percent of the votes, Marina Silva comes in a distant third. Silva, who grew up in poverty and is committed to environmental causes, quickly became the frontrunner in the election after the Socialist party’s candidate died in a plane crash in August. But Garcia-Navarro reports that Silva’s campaign team failed to counter weeks of negative campaign ads.

The runoff vote will take place Oct. 26.

Article source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2014/10/05/353928154/neves-will-face-incumbent-rousseff-in-brazils-runoff-election?utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=news

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