Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Brazil moves to criminaliz­e inaccurate polls

Bolsonaro, allies furious over errors in election forecasts

- By Andre Spigariol and Jack Nicas

BRASILIA, Brazil — In the first round of Brazil’s closely watched elections this month, the polls were off the mark. They significan­tly underestim­ated the support for the far-right incumbent, President Jair Bolsonaro, and other conservati­ve candidates across the country.

Many on the right were furious, criticizin­g the pollsters as out of touch with the Brazilian electorate.

That response was expected. What happened next was not.

At the urging of Bolsonaro, some of Brazil’s leaders are trying to make it a crime to incorrectl­y forecast an election.

Brazil’s House of Representa­tives has fast-tracked a bill that would criminaliz­e publishing a poll that is later shown to fall outside its margin of error. The House, which is controlled by Bolsonaro’s allies, is expected to vote and pass the measure.

The bill’s final shape and fate is unclear. House leaders have suggested they may soften the legislatio­n, and its prospects in the Senate, where opponents of Bolsonaro are in the majority, appear far less certain.

Still, whatever the measure’s fate, the proposal and other efforts to investigat­e pollsters for their recent miscalcula­tions are part of a broader narrative pushed by Bolsonaro and his allies, without evidence, that Brazil’s political establishm­ent and the left are trying to rig the election against him.

As Brazil prepares to vote in a presidenti­al runoff Sunday, the surveys continue to show Bolsonaro trailing his left-wing rival, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, a former president, although the race seems to be tightening.

For his part, Bolsonaro has taken to calling the polling firms “liars,” claimed that their mistakes swung up to 3 million votes to da Silva in the first round, and has advocated for the firms to face consequenc­es. “Not for getting it wrong, OK? An error is one thing,” he said. “It’s for the crimes they committed.”

He has not said what crimes he believes were committed.

The Brazilian Associatio­n of Pollsters said it was “outraged” at the attempts to criminaliz­e surveys that turn out to be inaccurate.

“Starting this type of investigat­ion during the runoff campaign period, when the polling companies are carrying out their work, demonstrat­es another clear attempt to impede scientific research,” the group said.

Polling firms added that their work was not to predict elections, but to provide a snapshot of voters’ intentions at the time a survey is

conducted.

The bill in Congress is not the only effort to target pollsters.

Following a request from Bolsonaro’s campaign, Brazil’s justice minister ordered the federal police to open an investigat­ion into polling firms over their surveys before the first election round. And Brazil’s federal antitrust agency opened its own inquiry into some of the nation’s top polling institutio­ns for possible collusion.

Alexandre de Moraes, a Supreme Court justice and Brazil’s elections chief, ordered both of those investigat­ions halted, saying that they lacked jurisdicti­on and that they appeared to be doing the president’s political bidding. In turn, Moraes ordered Brazil’s election agency to investigat­e whether Bolsonaro was trying to use his power over federal agencies inappropri­ately.

Moraes has emerged as the top check on Bolsonaro’s power over the past

year, drawing criticism at times for measures that, according to experts in law and government, represent a repressive turn for Brazil’s top court.

Among other moves, he has jailed five people without trial for posts on social media that he said attacked Brazil’s institutio­ns. On Oct. 20, election officials further expanded his power by giving him unilateral authority to suspend social media platforms in Brazil that do not quickly comply with his orders to remove misinforma­tion.

Moraes and Brazil’s Senate appear poised to protect polling firms from measures that target their surveys.

Yet repeated claims that pollsters are corrupt could further weaken their ability to provide the best possible gauge of public opinion. Some of Bolsonaro’s top advisers have urged his supporters to ignore survey takers in order to sabotage their results.

“Do not respond to any of them until the end of the election!!! That way, it’ll be certain from the start that any of their results are fraudulent,” Ciro Nogueira, Bolsonaro’s chief of staff, wrote on Twitter. “Was their absurd screw-up criminal? Only a deep investigat­ion will tell.”

The top polling firms had forecast that Bolsonaro would receive 36% of the vote in the first round. He received 43.2%, a sevenpoint gap that was outside virtually all polls’ margins of error.

Their performanc­e was even worse in many down-ballot races.

In Rio de Janeiro, the polls showed that the conservati­ve candidate for governor was ahead by 9 percentage points. Instead, he won by 31 points.

In Sao Paulo, some polls showed that a left-wing candidate for Senate was ahead of his opponent by 14 percentage points heading into the first election round.

Instead, a right-wing candidate won by nearly that same margin — a swing of

28 percentage points from what the polls had found.

The polling firms have blamed a variety of factors for their flawed forecasts, including outdated census data that hampered their ability to survey a statistica­lly representa­tive sample of voters. The firms said their polls were also undercut because a larger-than-expected wave of voters switched their ballots to Bolsonaro from thirdparty candidates at the last minute.

Some polling firms also said they believed that many conservati­ve voters were unwilling to answer their surveys.

The share of older voters far exceeded expectatio­ns, potentiall­y because of a government announceme­nt this year that voting was a new way to establish proof of life and keep retirement benefits active. Polls on the eve of the election showed that older voters supported Bolsonaro over da Silva.

Brazil is far from the only country where polls struggle to give an accurate picture of the electorate, particular­ly the strength of conservati­ve support.

In 2016, polls in the United States did not accurately forecast the support for Donald Trump, and the firms gave similar reasons for the miss, including that some right-wing voters were unwilling to answer surveys.

The credibilit­y of Brazil’s polling firms was damaged after the election’s first round, and some journalist­s have become more hesitant to share surveys before Sunday’s runoff.

Ricardo Barros, a conservati­ve congressma­n who is helping to push the bill to criminaliz­e faulty polls, said the legislatio­n would force polling companies to be more careful with their findings. Under the proposed law, only polls that err outside their margin of error would face liability.

 ?? MATIAS DELACROIX/AP ?? Brazilians line up Oct. 2 to cast ballots in their national election at a polling station in Rio de Janeiro.
MATIAS DELACROIX/AP Brazilians line up Oct. 2 to cast ballots in their national election at a polling station in Rio de Janeiro.

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