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Presidential election results map after voting: Blue denotes states won by Cardoso Red denotes states won by Lula Orange denotes the state won by Gomes |
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Brazil |
This article is part of the series: |
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General
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Other countries · Atlas |
The 1998 Brazilian general election was held on two rounds. The first round was held on Sunday, October 4.[1] On this date, Fernando Henrique Cardoso was re-elected President and the governorships of 14 states, all seats in the Chamber of Deputies and the state legislative assemblies, and one-third of the seats in the federal Senate were up for election.[2]
Second-round runoffs were held on October 25[1] for governorships of 12 states and the Federal District were defined.[3] This election was marked by the use of voting machines in Brazil for the first time. They were used in all municipalities two years later in the 2000 local elections.
This was the third general election held after the promulgation of the 1988 Constitution and the third time Brazilians directly elected the President since the end of the military dictatorship. Shortly before these elections were held, the federal government was able to approve in the National Congress a constitutional amendment bill allowing the re-election of members of the executive branch of government. There was much discussion about the constitutionality of the bill,[4] and denouncements were made by the press that some parliamentarians were bribed to vote for the approval of the bill.[5]
Controversies aside, then President Fernando Henrique Cardoso, backed by a coalition that included the three major parties of the time – the Liberal Front Party, the Brazilian Democratic Movement Party (which offered their informal support to him), and his own Brazilian Social Democratic Party – was able to be re-elected in the first round after achieving 53% of the valid votes. Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, a third-time candidate for the Workers' Party, came in second with almost 32% of the votes. Ciro Gomes, then a member of the Socialist People's Party came in third, with almost 11% of the votes.
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Fernando Henrique Cardoso, better known as FHC, had been inaugurated as President on January 1, 1995, after defeating Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, his main rival in the 1994 election, in the first round by an advantage of almost 30 million votes.[6] FHC had based his first presidential campaign in the then newly-launched Real Plan and the promise of stabilizing the economy of Brazil. As a matter of fact, the plan had a positive effect during the first years of his administration, being able to curb the exorbitant inflation rates, stabilize the exchange rate, and increase the purchasing power of the Brazilian population without shocks or price freezing.[6]
On the very first day of his administration, the Treaty of Asunción came into force.[6] Signed by Fernando Collor de Mello, it predicted the implementation of Mercosur, a free trade area between Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, and Paraguay.[6] Moreover, the first FHC administration was marked by political and economic reforms, such as the end of the state monopolies in oil and telecommunications, the reform on the social security plans, and the change in the concept of "national company".[6] Although approved in the Congress, the reforms carried by the federal government met strong resistance from the opposition, most notably the Workers' Party, which fiercely criticized the privatization of companies such as Vale do Rio Doce and the constitutional amendment that allowed the re-election of officeholders in the Executive branch.[6] As a result, Peter Mandelson, a close aide to then British Prime Minister and Labour Party leader Tony Blair, stated that the Workers' Party's proposals represented "an old-fashioned and out-of-date socialism".[7] At that time, FHC-Blair relations were magnified, once both of them were adherents of the Third Way.
Despite its political victories, the government needed to impose measures to cool down the domestic demand and help the trade balance, which eventually caused unemployment to grow and made the economy show signs of recession.[6] Other areas, such as health, education and land reform also suffered major crises.[6] The violent conflict in the countryside reached its peak with the Eldorado dos Carajás massacre. Thus, FHC's reelection campaign was based on the idea that the continuity of his government was essential for the stabilization to reach areas other than the economy, such as health, agriculture, employment, education, and public security.[6]
The 1998 presidential race had twelve candidates, the largest number of candidates since the 1989 election, when over twenty candidacies were launched. The number could have been as high as fifteen, but the Electoral Justice withdrew the candidacy of impeached President Fernando Collor de Mello,[8] while Oswaldo Souza Oliveira[9] and João Olivar Farias declined to run.
The Brazilian Social Democratic Party reprised the coalition which had elected FHC four years prior, comprising the Liberal Front Party and the Brazilian Labour Party. They were joined by the Progressive Party, the Social Democratic Party, and the Social Liberal Party. Once again, Liberal Front member Marco Maciel was FHC's running mate.
The Workers' Party reprised its past two candidacies, by launching Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva as its candidate and forming a coalition with the Communist Party of Brazil, and the Brazilian Socialist Party. The novelty in this election was the choice of Leonel Brizola from the Democratic Labour Party as his running mate. Prior to that, the Workers' Party refrained from forming coalitions with parties linked to varguista labour unions as a way of sustaining its union branch, the Central Única dos Trabalhadores, as independent. As a result, the United Socialist Workers' Party left the coalition and launched José Maria de Almeida as its candidate.
Former Ceará state Governor Ciro Gomes run for President, and, therefore, his Socialist People's Party did not join the Workers' Party coalition as they did in the previous election. After Oswaldo Souza Oliveira's quit the race, his Party of the Nation's Retirees decided to support Gomes.
After securing the third place in the 1994 election, Enéas Carneiro from the far-right Party of the Reconstruction of the National Order also run in 1998. This time, however, he only received 1.4 million votes, against 4.6 million in 1994.
This election also brought the second woman candidate ever: Thereza Tinajero Ruiz from the National Labour Party, which replaced Dorival Masci de Abreu.[10]
Candidate | Total votes | Percentage |
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Fernando Henrique Cardoso (PSDB, PFL, PPB, PTB, PSD, PMDB) | 35,936,382 | 53.1 |
Luis Inácio Lula da Silva (PT, PDT, PSB, PC do B, PCB) | 21,475,211 | 31.7 |
Ciro Gomes (PPS, PL, PAN) | 7,426,187 | 11.0 |
Enéas Carneiro (PRONA) | 1,447,089 | 2.1 |
Ivan Moacyr da Frota (PMN) | 251,336 | 0.4 |
Alfredo Syrkis (PV) | 212,983 | 0.3 |
José Maria de Almeida (PSTU) | 202,659 | 0.3 |
João de Deus Barbosa de Jesus (PT do B) | 198,915 | 0.3 |
José Maria Eymael (PSDC) | 171,831 | 0.2 |
Thereza Tinajero Ruiz (PTN) | 166,138 | 0.2 |
Sergio Bueno (PSC) | 124,569 | 0.2 |
Vasco Azevedo Neto (PSN) | 109,003 | 0.2 |
Total (turnout 78.5%) | 67,701,559 | 100 |
Notes: party of the candidate, supporting parties, unofficial supporting parties | ||
Source: Banco de Dados Eleitorais do Brasil |
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