Berliner Boersenzeitung - Lula launches presidential campaign to 'rebuild Brazil'

EUR -
AED 4.165197
AFN 80.316892
ALL 98.08525
AMD 441.651549
ANG 2.043818
AOA 1037.621097
ARS 1366.206853
AUD 1.750532
AWG 2.044056
AZN 1.92424
BAM 1.95784
BBD 2.289246
BDT 137.753565
BGN 1.95436
BHD 0.427495
BIF 3372.704207
BMD 1.134012
BND 1.462482
BOB 7.863438
BRL 6.476568
BSD 1.133812
BTN 95.642629
BWP 15.374498
BYN 3.710514
BYR 22226.632268
BZD 2.277544
CAD 1.564063
CDF 3258.016349
CHF 0.93446
CLF 0.027766
CLP 1065.585702
CNY 8.245684
CNH 8.176543
COP 4877.815893
CRC 573.612986
CUC 1.134012
CUP 30.051314
CVE 110.380036
CZK 24.938395
DJF 201.906656
DKK 7.462251
DOP 66.729545
DZD 150.312704
EGP 57.452458
ERN 17.010178
ETB 151.361819
FJD 2.554705
FKP 0.853804
GBP 0.848451
GEL 3.107209
GGP 0.853804
GHS 15.278394
GIP 0.853804
GMD 81.071681
GNF 9820.234504
GTQ 8.728443
GYD 237.214543
HKD 8.789675
HNL 29.444687
HRK 7.530747
HTG 148.190322
HUF 404.589913
IDR 18605.675729
ILS 4.097106
IMP 0.853804
INR 95.599524
IQD 1485.247903
IRR 47756.070215
ISK 146.696098
JEP 0.853804
JMD 179.664373
JOD 0.804352
JPY 162.016833
KES 146.457865
KGS 99.168924
KHR 4540.912665
KMF 492.724034
KPW 1020.59119
KRW 1562.838246
KWD 0.347608
KYD 0.944914
KZT 583.403448
LAK 24516.307202
LBP 101590.011072
LKR 339.577378
LRD 226.763328
LSL 20.699895
LTL 3.348442
LVL 0.685952
LYD 6.210719
MAD 10.474832
MDL 19.427847
MGA 4993.358119
MKD 61.545995
MMK 2381.050366
MNT 4053.9745
MOP 9.050311
MRU 44.864757
MUR 51.472774
MVR 17.463852
MWK 1966.009625
MXN 22.369081
MYR 4.799701
MZN 72.520329
NAD 20.699072
NGN 1822.345759
NIO 41.725141
NOK 11.678746
NPR 153.027531
NZD 1.89229
OMR 0.436581
PAB 1.133817
PEN 4.155496
PGK 4.633829
PHP 62.8407
PKR 318.945457
PLN 4.275482
PYG 9077.460395
QAR 4.137585
RON 5.089107
RSD 117.355411
RUB 92.025064
RWF 1610.027639
SAR 4.25325
SBD 9.489805
SCR 16.120279
SDG 680.980484
SEK 10.867006
SGD 1.46211
SHP 0.891155
SLE 25.799024
SLL 23779.643083
SOS 647.992471
SRD 41.788141
STD 23471.755743
SVC 9.920339
SYP 14744.367148
SZL 20.702397
THB 37.047053
TJS 11.763323
TMT 3.969041
TND 3.40158
TOP 2.65597
TRY 43.784504
TTD 7.684246
TWD 33.984051
TZS 3058.995688
UAH 46.976859
UGX 4147.322278
USD 1.134012
UYU 47.560406
UZS 14669.547105
VES 100.486525
VND 29442.916678
VUV 136.879407
WST 3.13698
XAF 656.667427
XAG 0.034236
XAU 0.000334
XCD 3.064724
XDR 0.81837
XOF 656.667427
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.322435
ZAR 20.656843
ZMK 10207.473702
ZMW 30.64188
ZWL 365.151353
  • RBGPF

    3.2400

    66.24

    +4.89%

  • AZN

    -0.8150

    71.275

    -1.14%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    22.04

    +0.09%

  • GSK

    0.0100

    38.86

    +0.03%

  • RIO

    0.2150

    59.785

    +0.36%

  • SCS

    -0.0800

    9.89

    -0.81%

  • BTI

    0.4700

    44.22

    +1.06%

  • NGG

    0.5200

    72.36

    +0.72%

  • BP

    -0.6800

    28.5

    -2.39%

  • BCE

    0.5000

    21.89

    +2.28%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    10.45

    +0.29%

  • JRI

    -0.0150

    13.035

    -0.12%

  • RELX

    -0.1250

    54.915

    -0.23%

  • BCC

    -6.6800

    85.79

    -7.79%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    22.23

    -0.13%

  • VOD

    0.0900

    9.69

    +0.93%

Lula launches presidential campaign to 'rebuild Brazil'
Lula launches presidential campaign to 'rebuild Brazil' / Photo: NELSON ALMEIDA - AFP

Lula launches presidential campaign to 'rebuild Brazil'

Former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva launched his campaign for a new presidential term Saturday, vowing to rebuild Brazil after what he called the "irresponsible and criminal" administration of far-right incumbent Jair Bolsonaro.

Text size:

The campaign launch sealed a remarkable political comeback for the 76-year-old leftist icon, four years after he was jailed on controversial corruption charges.

"We're ready to work not only to win the election on October 2, but to rebuild and transform Brazil, which will be even more difficult," the charismatic but tarnished steelworker-turned-politician told a rally in Sao Paulo.

"We need to change Brazil once again... We need to return to a place where no one ever dares to defy democracy again. We need to send fascism back to the sewer of history, where it should have been all along," he said in his trademark gravelly voice.

It was hardly a secret Lula, who has enjoyed a long -- though shrinking -- lead in the polls, would jump into the campaign, which does not officially start until August.

Lula, who led Brazil through an economic boom from 2003 to 2010, has been in unofficial campaign mode since March last year, when the Supreme Court annulled the corruption convictions that sidelined him from politics.

The Supreme Court's finding of bias on the part of the lead judge in the case, Sergio Moro -- who went on to become Bolsonaro's justice minister -- instantly set up this year's elections as a polarizing clash between arch-enemies Lula and Bolsonaro.

- Surprise return -

Lula left office 12 years ago with approval ratings of 87 percent, after presiding over a golden period that lifted some 30 million Brazilians from poverty.

But the onetime shoeshine boy's towering legacy came crashing down with the explosion of "Operation Car Wash," a sweeping investigation that uncovered a massive corruption scheme centered on state-run oil company Petrobras.

Lula was convicted on bribe-taking charges and sentenced to 26 years in prison.

He started his sentence in April 2018, removing him from that year's presidential race, which Bolsonaro won on a wave of outrage against Lula and his Workers' Party (PT).

Lula, who calls the case a conspiracy, was released pending appeal in November 2019 but was barred from politics until last year's ruling.

In a Brazil deeply divided over Bolsonaro's combative style, social media polemics, weak performance on the economy and chaotic handling of Covid-19, Lula returned to the ring with the immediate status of front-runner.

- 'Disastrous' gaffes -

But Bolsonaro, 67, has narrowed the gap in the latest polls -- and made it clear he won't leave power without a fight.

Lula has meanwhile made a series of recent gaffes, alienating voters from several key groups with politically tone-deaf remarks on abortion, the police and the middle class.

He has also looked out of sync with world leaders he aspires to rub elbows with again -- saying, for example, that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is "as responsible as" Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin for the Ukraine war.

"He has made several disastrous statements in recent weeks," Sylvio Costa, founder of news site Congresso em Foco, told AFP.

"And, above all, Lula needs to go to the street."

The veteran leftist said he would now do just that, criss-crossing the country to meet with "the people."

Wearing a sharp navy suit, his shirt open at the collar, he stuck strictly to the script at his rally, rather than speaking off the cuff as he typically does.

But he was short on tangible planks for his platform.

"Instead of promises, I present the immense legacy of our administration," he told the cheering crowd of thousands.

Lula has reportedly shaken up his campaign team recently, removing long-time ally Franklin Martins as communications chief.

Courting the wary business sector and seeking to build a broad base, Lula has tapped market-friendly centrist Geraldo Alckmin -- the opponent he defeated in the 2006 presidential race -- as his running-mate.

"Brazil today has the most disastrous and cruel government in its history," Alckmin, a former Sao Paulo governor who was home with a mild case of Covid-19, told the rally by video link.

"Lula is our only hope."

(Y.Berger--BBZ)