The Borneo Post

Lula launches presidenti­al candidacy from prison

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SAO PAULO/BRASÍLIA: Even behind bars, Brazil’s Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva will secure his leftist party’s nomination Saturday and continue to overshadow more likely candidates in the country’s most unpredicta­ble presidenti­al election for decades.

Saturday will see three big party convention­s, two months before the first round of voting on Oct 7 in Latin America’s dominant economy.

Center-left environmen­tal campaigner Marina Silva will get the nomination of her Rede party in Brasilia. Also in the capital, former Sao Paulo governor and establishm­ent heavyweigh­t Geraldo Alckmin will secure the nod from the center-right Brazilian Social Democratic Party, or PSDB.

But while both Silva and Alckmin are serious contenders in a battle against controvers­ial right-winger Jair Bolsonaro, it’s the third convention taking place in Sao Paulo that will suck up much of the attention.

The Workers’ Party, founded by Lula, will nominate him in his bid to return to power for a third term. Never mind that he started serving a 12-year sentence for corruption this year. Never mind that he is likely to be barred from the ballot.

Despite the scandals – which he and his supporters believe have been artificial­ly stoked to keep him out of the election – Lula is still unquestion­ably the biggest beast in Brazilian politics.

Polls show him with near double the support of all other main candidates in a first round, crushing any runner up in the second decisive round two weeks later.

Lula and his Workers’ Party, which underpinne­d his domination of Brazil during two terms in 2003-2010, believe he’s no yesterday’s man.

“He’s still the leader,” rubs in the Workers’ Party’s latest election ad online, featuring a picture of the smiling 72-year-old, dressed in his trademark black T-shirt and suit jacket.

Lula is waiting for final court judgment on whether he can run. It doesn’t look good: under current law anyone losing an appeal of a criminal conviction is not allowed on the ballot.

So despite the left’s almost cultlike enthusiasm for Lula, there will be close attention Saturday to the choice for vice president – a figure who could end up standing in for the imprisoned leader.

One high-profile possibilit­y is former Sao Paulo mayor Fernando Haddad. A powerful politician, he has signed on to Lula’s legal team, giving him easy access to the prison, and he would be well placed to inherit Lula’s electorate. — AFP

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