The latest Ipec poll brought relief to the election campaign of former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (PT). The poll, which shows that Lula would receive 50% of the valid votes if an election were held today, feeds hopes of victory in the first round.
Although the outcome in the first phase is further away, the former president has managed to stay at a level that still leaves open the possibility of a win on October 2, according to recent polls by Ipec and Datafolha.
The Ipec poll showed that Lula received 44% of the vote, the same as the institute’s two previous polls. President Jair Bolsonaro (PL) fluctuated 31% minus one point. Turnover Gomes (PDT) scored 8% with a positive swing of one point. And Simone Tebet (MDB) also fluctuated one point positive, from 3% to 4%.
Another important piece of data: Bolsonaro’s rejection rose from 46% to 49%. Lula retained 36% of the previous poll.
In the second-round simulation, the PT has 52% versus 36% of the current president.
A useful voting campaign will gain more power if, in the ten days before the first round, Lula remains at close to 50% of the valid votes.
To do this, Lula needs to hold the ground, curb the growth of his rejection, and fuel his hatred for Bolsonaro.
people understand
Qualitative research shows that voters understand what it means to buy real estate with cash without specifying the source of the money. report UOL This was used by the PT campaign to wear out Bolsonaro, which revealed that Bolsonaro and his family members bought at least 51 properties in cash. And it worked, according to PT.
The question you don’t want to shut up
Bolsonaro again attacked a journalist who asked a question he didn’t want to be kept quiet. On Jovem Pan, Amanda Klein asked about the source of the money used by the Bolsonaro family to buy real estate.
The misogynist president said the journalist was her husband’s voter and did not know what repercussion this had in her household. In other words, with his 18th century mentality, Bolsonaro thinks women are extensions of men.
It’s been 90 years since women gained the right to vote in Brazil. They do not need husbands or fathers to make decisions about their personal and professional lives. As journalist Xico Sá has posted, this is a woman-hating president.
Amanda Klein asked a legitimate question, and throughout the interview she had the honor of listening politely and firmly to the president’s attack and threatening her. These were the subjects of the program “Radar das Eleções”. UOL About the current campaign.
source: Noticias