Brazil votes in local elections with eyes on 2026 presidential showdown
BRAZIL – Brazilians voted on Sunday for mayors and city councilors in more than 5,500 municipal elections, with polls showing conservative candidates running strong in several major cities, setting the country’s political landscape ahead of a 2026 presidential race. All eyes are on the mayoral vote in Sao Paulo, Brazil’s largest city, where three candidates are running neck and neck after an aggressive campaign, setting the stage for a second-round runoff on Oct. 27.
Center-right incumbent Mayor Ricardo Nunes, who led the race until last week, is tied for second place at 26% of the votes with far-right digital influencer Pablo Marçal, an unprecedented split in the conservative vote, according to a poll on Saturday. Leftist Congressman Guilherme Boulos, who is supported by President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and his Workers Party, has edged forward on the eve of the election and is leading the field with 29%, pollster Datafolha found. Marçal, an anti-establishment political novice who has surged in the polls with his vitriolic attacks on adversaries, ran a social media campaign with little funding and no TV time. He has headlined the news for weeks since a furious fifth-placed candidate hit him with a chair during a televised debate. Polls showed that candidates linked to Lula are facing trouble as the president’s popularity has slipped in his third non-consecutive term. “As long as democracy exists, the people’s right to choose will exist, for better or for worse,” Lula said after casting his vote on Sunday. “What we cannot allow to happen is that people vote uninformed.”
He has largely avoided taking to the campaign trail for mayoral candidates, although their success would boost his chances in 2026, when he is expected to run for re-election. (Reuters)…[+]