The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Exit of anti-graft figure shakes up Brazil presidenti­al election

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NITER I, Brazil: Brazil’s upcoming presidenti­al election got a shakeup Tuesday when a former Supreme Court justice seen as tough on graft said he would not be running, leaving a multitude of other candidates jostling to seize the advantage.

Joaquim Barbosa – the country’s first black chief justice, who had been touted as a strong outsider candidate – announced he would not compete.

“It’s decided,” he tweeted. “I finally came to a decision. I will not be a candidate for president of the republic. The decision is purely personal.”

With Brazilians hungry for change after years of instabilit­y and scandal in the capital Brasilia, Barbosa was seen as a fresh face with strong anti-corruption credential­s from his time on the Supreme Court.

Despite having no experience in electoral politics and having done no campaignin­g, the 63-year-old was performing surprising­ly well in opinion polls.

Earlier this year, another popular outsider and nonpolitic­ian, television presenter Luciano Huck, decided against running, despite what analysts said was his potential to capture weary voters’ imaginatio­ns.

Barbosa’s exit added to the uncertaint­yinwhatmay­alreadybe the least predictabl­e election since Brazil returned to democracy in 1985 after two decades of military dictatorsh­ip.

The easy frontrunne­r in polls, leftist ex-president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, is serving a 12-year prison sentence for corruption and is almost certain to be excluded from the ballot.

Meanwhile, the closest runnerup, Jair Bolsonaro, is a firebrand right-wing ex-army officer who openly praises the dictatorsh­ip.

That leaves the field open for a viable leftist candidate and also someone who can fill the wide space in the center.

At an event with a dozen would-be candidates in Rio de Janeiro suburb Niteroi, leftist candidate Ciro Gomes said that “Brazil needs change.”

However, he expressed frustratio­n at the decision by the Workers’ Party, the biggest leftist party in Brazil, to insist on still pushing the jailed – and likely to be disqualifi­ed – Lula as its candidate. — AFP

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