The international press has echoed Lula’s victory in the second round of Brazil’s presidential elections. The return of the Labor Party to a third term, after spending 12 years away from power, is being celebrated as a salvage of democracy, after a far-right government that decimated Latin America’s largest economy.
The international press has echoed Lula’s victory in the second round of Brazil’s presidential elections. The return of the Labor Party to a third term, after spending 12 years away from power, is being celebrated as a salvage of democracy, after a far-right government that decimated Latin America’s largest economy.
French Le Monde He says Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva “is making an amazing return from prison to the presidency,” but he’s less triumphant than expected. “With 50.9% of the vote, winning was more complicated” than expected and Lula inherits a divided country, the newspaper assessed.
In power, Lula promised to build a “new Brazil”. But after a difficult victory, faced with a hostile Congress, an uncertain economic context, and a violent, highly polarized state, no one knows what room to maneuver, he says. Le Monde. One thing is for sure: “The Brazilian phoenix will have to use all his talents to raise the country from the ashes.”
“Lula has been elected as the new president of Brazil, but what is Bolsonaro doing?” , wonders the main address of Brazil Suddeutsche Zeitung. “The concern is great, because he may not recognize the elections,” in the face of the narrow victory of the Labor Party, according to the German newspaper.
in the UK, Watchman He says Lula is “again surprising” with the defeat of the far right and the restoration of leadership, and has promised to reunite the country. He writes: “It was one of the most important and difficult elections in the history of Brazil (…) a poisoned race for power, which deeply divided one of the largest democracies in the world.” Watchman.
“If it wasn’t for Bolsonaro’s putting in the drawer”
In an editorial, Spanish Country It highlights that the Labor Party (PT) won more than 13.3 million votes compared to the 2018 presidential election, while Jair Bolsonaro received only 401,000 more votes. “It will be the beginning of a new era, in which the resurrection of the former leftist president, imprisoned for a year and a half on charges of corruption from which he was finally acquitted, will be accompanied by the challenge of rebuilding a seriously torn country,” he notes. The largest newspaper in Spain.
Far-right government Bolsonaro, in his persistent and dangerous polarization, has deteriorated the quality of democracy It is the largest economy in Latin America. Contempt for institutions such as the Supreme Electoral Court, persistent attacks on women and minorities, and advocacy of the president’s use of guns jeopardize the coexistence of 214 million people. It is now up to Lula to restore lost values and overcome a divide that, as the elections show, is deep and has the potential to short-circuit his future policies,” Analytics Country.
in Portugal, a general Highlights of Lula’s speech after the victory. “Capacity and dialogue, the fight against hunger as a priority and Brazil’s return to leadership in the fight against climate change. In his victory speech, Lula put the Bolsonaro in the drawer,” says the newspaper.
With a picture of smiling Lola in her American address New York times It states that “this victory completes an impressive political revival” for the leftist leader and “ends the turbulent period for Bolsonaro as the most powerful leader in the region”. Lula’s return to the Planalto Palace “will likely represent major changes, although Lula’s specific plans remain a mystery.” a The New York Times He shares the question thousands of Brazilians have in their heads: “Will President Jair Bolsonaro accept his defeat?”
