Labor appears from behind Cyrus Gomez, which still does not grow substantially and would have 10% of the votes.
To win in the first turn, the candidate must add 50% of the valid votes plus one.
The presidential elections in Brazil will hold the first round on October 2, and if a ballot is necessary it will be on the 30th of the same month.
https://twitter.com/LulaOficial/status/1540103997360578571
Despite a month of propaganda on TV and a flood of fake news about Bolsonaroism on the internet, a new investigation shows, more than once, that the Brazilian people want to be seen freely from the tragic government.
– Lula (@LulaOficial) June 23, 2022
The 76-year-old leftist leader concentrates 47% of the voting intentions, followed by the ultra-conservative president, with 28%, but with null and blank discounts, the difference rises to 19 points and the candidate of the alliance that leads the Workers’ Party (PT) would exceed the minimum required to win in the first round.
In May, the two opposite candidates on the political spectrum stood at 54% and 30%, respectively.
In an eventual ballot, on October 30, Lula would add 57% of the votes against 34% for Bolsonaro, close to the 58% and 33% obtained in May, revealed Datafolha.
“The new survey shows, once again, that the Brazilian people want to get rid of this tragic government,” Lula tweeted after the release.
Bolsonaro, who dismisses the polls, rows against high inflation, of 11.73% in the 12 months to May, which continues to cut the population’s wages and affect its image.
55% of those polled by Datafolha said they would “never” vote for Bolsonaro, compared to 35% who would never vote for Lula, levels of rejection similar to those recorded in the previous survey (54% and 33%, respectively).
Datafolha interviewed 2,556 people in person between June 22 and 23 in 181 Brazilian cities and its results include a margin of error of +/- 2 points.
Source: Ambito

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