The Southland Times

Far-right candidate draws protest crowds

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Tens of thousands of Brazilians took to the streets yesterday in protest against the presidenti­al front-runner, a far-right congressma­n whose campaign has exposed and deepened divisions in Latin America’s largest country.

The protests came the same day that Jair Bolsonaro was discharged from a Sao Paulo hospital where he received treatment after being stabbed during a campaign rally on September 6. After flying home to Rio, he tweeted that there was ‘‘no better feeling’’ than to be close to his family.

In Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro and Brasilia, people flooded avenues and squares to sing, dance and shout ‘‘Not him!’’ — the rallying cry of groups who are trying to prevent Bolsonaro from taking office in October elections.

‘‘We’re saying to those people who are undecided: Not him,’’ said Selia Figueiredo, a 43-yearold banker in Sao Paulo, who said she worried for her rights as a gay woman if Bolsonaro were to win. They can vote ‘‘for anyone else, but not him.’’

In the heart of Sao Paulo, Brazil’s largest city, leftist presidenti­al candidate Guilherme Boulos and his running mate Sonia Guajajara led the march, while people beat drums and waved gay pride flags and banners that denounced Bolsonaro, who is known for offensive comments about gays, women and black people.

In downtown Rio de Janeiro, a crowd that was heavily women shouted: ‘‘Sexists and fascists won’t advance!’’

Other smaller rallies were held in cities around Brazil, including some in support of the candidate.

Bolsonaro’s candidacy has attracted internatio­nal attention as an example of the trend in many countries toward populism and extremes in politics, and small protests were held against him in London, Lisbon, Berlin and Paris.

Bolsonaro is currently leading polls with around 28 per cent of support among voters polled, but he also has the highest rejection rate of any candidate. That could become especially important if no one wins the majority of votes on October 7, and the election is

‘‘We’re saying to those people who are undecided: Not him.’’ Selia Figueiredo

decided in a second round. Polls then show him losing in most scenarios. Bolsonaro has said he will accept nothing less than victory and suggested his opponents will commit fraud to defeat him.

His support is particular­ly thin among women, who led the protests against him yesterday. According to a recent Ibope poll, 36 per cent of men surveyed said they would vote for Bolsonaro, while only 18 per cent of women supported him — an unusually large gap.

The difference in support between men and woman for other candidates varies by only a handful of percentage points.

–AP

 ?? AP ?? A woman holds a sign with a message that reads in Portuguese: "Not Him" during a protest against leading presidenti­al candidate Jair Bolsonaro, at Cinelandia Square in Rio de Janeiro.
AP A woman holds a sign with a message that reads in Portuguese: "Not Him" during a protest against leading presidenti­al candidate Jair Bolsonaro, at Cinelandia Square in Rio de Janeiro.

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