By Anthony Boadle
The political party that
launched environmentalist Marina Silva's unsuccessful presidential bid threw
its support behind pro-business candidate Aecio Neves on Wednesday for Brazil's
Oct. 26 runoff vote against leftist President Dilma Rousseff.
The decision by the Brazilian
Socialist Party increases the likelihood that the bulk of Silva's 22 million
votes would go to Neves, raising his chances of defeating Rousseff.
Silva, an anti-establishment
figure who wanted to change Brazilian politics by ending polarization between
Neves and Rousseff's parties, came third in Sunday's first-round vote. She is
expected to endorse Neves on Thursday.
Her backing is crucial for Neves,
the market favorite running for the Brazilian Social Democracy Party (PSDB).
Neves won 33.6 percent of the votes to Rousseff's 41.6 percent, a difference of
8 million votes.
Silva surged in the polls in
late August when she was thrust into the race by the death of her running mate
and original PSB presidential candidate Eduardo Campos in a plane crash. But
her popularity was undercut by an aggressive media blitz by Rousseff that
linked her to Brazil's financial elite and questioned her ability to govern
without the backing of traditional parties.
"I have become the
candidate of change," Neves said at the PSB's headquarters in Brasilia,
where he paid homage to the party's late leader Campos. "His dreams are
now my dreams. His commitments have also become my commitments," Neves
said.
PSB Senator Rodrigo Rollemberg
said his party backed Neves because alternation in power was needed in Brazil
after the country stagnated for the last four years under Rousseff.
Neves is also seeking
endorsement by the influential family of Campos, a former governor of the
northeastern state of Pernambuco, where some 2 million votes won by Marina are
up for grabs.
"With the explicit support
of Marina and the family of Eduardo Campos, Neves can grow in poorer parts of
Brazil like the Northeast where Rousseff has a lot of votes due to her
government's social programs," said political scientist Carlos Melo of the
Insper, a leading Brazilian business school.
Rousseff kicked off her
campaign for the runoff on Wednesday with a whistle-stop trip to Northeastern
states to protect her bastion of support from inroads by Neves, who is more
popular in the industrialized and agribusiness states of Brazil's south.
Her campaign is portraying a
Neves government as one that will bring recession, unemployment and income
losses, citing the austerity policies enacted by past administrations of her
rival's party.
Investors do not see it that
way. Brazilian stocks soared and the currency strengthened early this week on
the prospect that Neves could defeat Rousseff, whose heavy-handed economic
policies are blamed for driving a once-booming economy into recession this
year.
There was more bad news for
Rousseff on Wednesday.
Inflation sped up to its
highest rate in nearly three years, raising the prospect of higher interest
rates next year. Brazil also got another debt downgrade warning by Moody's
Investors Service.
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