Imprisoned Lula registers Brazil presidential candidacy
BRASILIA: Imprisoned leftist leader Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s unlikely bid for Brazil’s presidency took a big step forward on Wednesday with the formal registration of his candidacy in the capital Brasilia.
About 10,000 red-clad Workers’ Party faithful marched on the Supreme Electoral Court, where top Lula allies did the paperwork to name the two term ex-president, now in jail for corruption, as their champion in Brazil’s October election.
"I registered my candidacy for the presidency of the republic..., certain that I can do a lot to pull Brazil from one of its worst crises in history," Lula, who leads in the polls, declared in a letter released to the party.
The gesture shook up an already wildly unpredictable contest which features a former army captain who praises Brazil’s past dictatorship and an environmental campaigner among the other frontrunners.
"Today is a very important date. We came here to register comrade Lula’s candidacy, despite those who didn’t want it to happen," said Gleisi Hoffmann, head of the Workers’ Party founded by Lula, after she emerged from court brandishing the official registration paper. But the drama could prove little more than symbolic.
Lula only began serving a 12-year prison sentence for accepting a seaside apartment as a bribe this year and under Brazil’s clean slate law he is likely to be barred. The electoral court will soon issue a ruling.
Supporters of the one-time shoeshine boy, who rose to become a hugely popular leader and major figure on the world stage during his 2003-2010 presidency, believe he has been deliberately excluded from the race.
Despite all his legal troubles, Lula easily heads opinion polls. At the same time, he has soaring rejection ratings, reflecting his evolution into an intensely divisive figure.
Backers see Lula as a political prisoner persecuted by a vengeful right-wing that never forgave him for raising millions from poverty and attacking Brazil’s shocking racial and social inequalities.
Foes equate Lula, 72, with everything that has gone wrong in Brazil since his chosen Workers’ Party successor Dilma Rousseff took over the presidency in 2011. Rousseff was brought down in impeachment proceedings in 2016.
After years of recession, rising crime and a corruption scandal that sucked in everyone from Lula to many of his enemies, a large portion of Brazilians would be happy to see the Workers’ Party founder also removed from the scene.
The New York Times published an article by Lula on Tuesday in which he branded his graft sentence -- which has been confirmed by an appeals court after a trial -- as "the latest phase in a slow-motion coup" against Brazil’s left.
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