The Borneo Post (Sabah)

After Lula candidacy shot down, Brazil party faces replacemen­t dilemma

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RIO DE JANEIRO: After a top Brazilian court disqualifi­ed ex-president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva from participat­ing in October elections, his party was mulling whether to persist with their jailed leader or turn to his running mate.

Following hours of debate on Friday, Superior Electoral Court judges voted 6-to-1 against the 72year-old Lula's candidacy, hours before television campaignin­g for the fall election began.

They gave the Workers' Party (PT) a Sept 12 deadline to find a replacemen­t candidate for what is the most uncertain Brazilian election in decades. But the PT has vowed to 'continue fighting with all means' to secure Lula's candidacy.

Lula appeared in the party's television campaignin­g slot, which saw running mate Fernando Haddad promise: “We're going with Lula until the end.”

Haddad campaigned in Lula's native state of Pernambuco, where he vowed the party would maintain a political and moral stance in keeping with Lula's leadership 'and the desire of over 50 per cent of Brazilians.'

He is also set to visit Lula in the Curitiba prison where he is serving a 12-year sentence for accepting a luxury seaside apartment as a bribe from a constructi­on firm.

“The PT must readjust its strategy,” columnist Tereza Cruvinel wrote in the Jornal do Brasil newspaper, but “nothing will be decided before the meeting between Haddad, other party members and Lula.”

If Haddad is named as the PT's candidate, Manuela D'Avila of Brazil's Communist Party will assume the running-mate position, according to a previous agreement between the parties. But unlike Lula, former Sao Paulo mayor Haddad commands little popular support.

In the latest opinion polls, Lula was awarded 39 percent of voting intentions – 20 points ahead of his closest competitor, far-right former military officer Jair Bolsonaro. Millions of Brazilians still adore him due to the prosperity the country enjoyed under his leadership from 2003 to 2010.

Former Argentine president Cristina Kirchner – herself facing multiple corruption investigat­ions – expressed support for Lula.

“Now they are preventing úLulaOffic­ial from being a presidenti­al candidate because they know he would win October's elections,” she tweeted.

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