VZCZCXRO6050
PP RUEHRG
DE RUEHBR #1250/01 2941421
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
P 211421Z OCT 09
FM AMEMBASSY BRASILIA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 5243
INFO RUEHRG/AMCONSUL RECIFE 0031
RUEHRI/AMCONSUL RIO DE JANEIRO 8298
RUEHSO/AMCONSUL SAO PAULO 4665
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 04 BRASILIA 001250
SIPDIS
E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/21/2019
TAGS: PREL PGOV BR
SUBJECT: BRAZIL'S 2010 ELECTIONS: ONE YEAR OUT
REF: A. BRASILIA 1127
B. BRASILIA 905
C. RECIFE 66
D. RIO DE JANEIRO 340
E. SAO PAULO 551
Classified By: Charge D'Affaires Lisa Kubiske for reasons 1.4 (b) and ( d).
1. (SBU) Summary. One year before Brazil's October 2010 national elections, Social Democratic Party (PSDB) presidential
candidate Jose Serra continues to lead Labor Party (PT) hopeful Dilma Rousseff in the polls, while PMDB, Brazil's
largest party, uses its bargaining leverage to maintain its advantages in parliament and in key state races. President
Lula has further solidified the PT-PMDB alliance in recent weeks, but is having difficulty herding the center-left
parties in his coalition, some of which are launching their own presidential candidates. The October 3 deadline for
party switching and electoral reform produced a flurry of movement, including party switches by both the Foreign
Minister and the Central Bank President. These moves presaged a potential forthcoming exodus of over half the ministers
in Lula's cabinet by April 3, the date by which candidates must declare themselves for office; such an event would
dramatically reduce Brazil's governing capacity during the campaign season. Congress will likewise lose impetus by
April, increasing the need for a strong push by Lula in order to enact Pre-Salt oil exploration and other key
legislative objectives considered crucial to the campaign. Observers from all sides expect the presidential race to
tighten considerably as the election approaches, with the final outcome depending in large part on Lula's ability to
transfer his personal popularity to Dilma while at the same time allowing her to distinguish herself from Lula as a
viable presidential figure. End summary.
What's At Stake, What's to Come -------------------------------
2. (SBU) Brazil's national elections, to be held October 3, 2010, will feature the largest number of open races for
federal and state office in over a generation. In addition to the presidential race, 54 of 81 federal senate seats, all
513 federal deputy seats, all 27 governorships, and all state deputy seats will be contested. On October 3, 2009, the
deadlines passed for switching parties or residences in order to run as a candidate from that party/state, and also for
passing electoral reforms related to the 2010 election. This is the first of several milestones in the next twelve
months, including: - April 3, 2010: Deadline for announcement of candidacy for all offices. State governors and members
of the executive branch running for office, including cabinet members, must resign; - June 10: Commencement of political
party nominating conventions for all offices; - July 3: Parties and candidates can start advertising on radio,
television, and the internet; - July 17: The Electoral Tribune (TSE) will allocate radio and television advertising to
parties; - September 13: TSE must confirm the correct functioning of vote machines; - October 3: Election Day, First
Round; - October 31: Election Day, Second Round. A second and final round is held when the leading candidate for a given
office receives less than 50 percent of the vote in the first round. Only the top two candidates are eligible to
compete.
One-Year Deadline -----------------
3. (C) In the two weeks leading to the October 3 deadline, five senators and at least 33 federal deputies switched
parties. The high number of party switches reflects the non-ideological nature of Brazilian politics and is standard
operating practice here among officials seeing greater opportunity elsewhere. (During an October 6 Embassy meeting with
Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Eduardo Azeredo, Sao Paulo Deputy William Woo cheerfully entered midway
through and, despite having left Azeredo's PSDB for PPS the previous week, was well received by the Chairman.) The PSDB,
which picked up three senate seats and several deputy seats, was the biggest winner in the shuffle, while PMDB and DEM,
the second largest opposition party, both suffered significant losses. Small parties fared surprisingly well, especially
the opposition PSC. House Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Severiano Alves switched from PDT to PMDB (both parties
within the governing coalition) and left Congress altogether in order to prepare BRASILIA 00001250 002 OF 004 for a run
as Vice-Governor in his home state of Bahia. Damiao Feliciano, also PDT and from the northeastern state of Paraiba, took
over October 8 as Committee Chairman.
4. (C) While most switchers are relatively obscure figures, two high-profile ministers switched parties while a
presidential candidate changed residence. After much speculation, Central Bank President Henrique Meirelles announced
his move from non-aligned to PMDB, where he is expected to run for Senate from Goias state, but might run instead for
Governor. Embassy sources, including Sen. Romero Juca (PMDB-RO), have told us that Meirelles' transfer confirms rumors
that he is also a top-tier potential vice-presidential candidate for Dilma. (It is broadly expected that PMDB will get
the Vice slot on Dilma's ticket, with Chamber of Deputies President Michel Temer most often named as the leading
contender.) Foreign Minister Celso Amorim officially switched from PMDB to PT, but there are no indications at this
point that he will step down to run for office in his home state of Rio de Janeiro. Finally, Ciro Gomes switched his
residence from the northeastern state of Ceara to his birth state, Sao Paulo, in a move that allows him to both run for
President on the PSB ticket and, potentially, to switch gears to run for Governor of Sao Paulo if his presidential
campaign falters. See ref C for more on Gomes.
Election Law, Internet and the Media ------------------------------------
5. (SBU) President Lula also signed on September 29 the law that will define the rules for the 2010 elections. The more
interesting changes include rules to permit campaign contributions and electioneering via the internet, to increase
participation of minor candidates in television/radio debates, and to introduce absentee voting. Many here believe, as
the chief PSDB-affiliated advisor to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee told poloff recently, that PT is better
prepared to take advantage of rule changes liberating the use of media and the internet but that his party and several
others will catch up in time. The new legislation has been widely panned by Embassy contacts -- including some senators
who voted for the law -- for actually reducing federal oversight over party campaign activities and expenditures.
Although the deadline for electoral reform has passed, a petition drive has gathered enough signatures to authorize
Congress through June 5 to pass legislation to prohibit candidates convicted of crimes to run for office. It is unclear
whether PMDB leadership, which has taken the lead in opposing such legislation, will allow such a bill to pass.
Ministerial Exodus, Congressional Paralysis -------------------------------------------
6. (C) Both Congress and the ministries will be in a hurry to produce as many electoral deliverables as possible before
the April 3 deadline for declaring candidacies. Ministers who declare are required to step down for their positions,
which means that no minister has officially declared his or her candidacy at this point -- even those who are already
actively campaigning. Media and Embassy sources suggest that over half of Lula's 37-member candidate will run for
office, most notably Chief-Minister Dilma Rousseff and Meirelles, but also the Ministers of Justice, Energy, Social
Security, Education, Environment, Planning, Labor, Communications, Agriculture and several others. It is still unclear
when ministers will declare their candidacies and depart their ministries, but recent media reports indicate that Dilma
will officially launch her presidential bid at the PT Annual Convention, which takes place February 18-21. In Meirelles'
case, Dep. Antonio Carlos Magalhaes Neto (DEM-BA) told poloff on October 9 that Meirelles will not announce the office
he will run for until a week before the deadline because "Lula needs to keep him in his current position as long as
possible." Other ministers, he said, will be free to announce earlier.
7. (C) Congress will also be under pressure for progress before the campaign starts in earnest, particularly on the
Pre-Salt oil exploration legislation, but also on a range of minor social assistance and education initiatives expected
to be launched shortly. The governing coalition still holds a strong position in the Chamber of Deputies but the recent
round of party switches complicates matters for Lula in the Senate, where his coalition officially suffered a net loss
of three seats but unofficially two more. Sen. Arthur Virgilio (PSDB-AM), the leader of his party in the Senate,
outlined for poloff on October 7 member-by-member how this would affect the President's ability to pass the legislation
he desires. Virgilio counted only 40 firm votes for the governing coalition on key party-line matters, and pointed out
specific coalition members likely to jump ship on key issues, including Venezuela's accession to Mercosul -- which he
said did not currently have the votes to pass either the Foreign Relations Committee or the full Senate due to worries
about Hugo Chavez. Virgilio also emphasized that Dilma needs to maintain her viability in the oil-producing states of
Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, and Espirito Santo, as do the seven senators from those states belonging to coalition
parties. This will make it very difficult to pass Pre-Salt legislation with the distribution of royalties scheme that
Lula and Dilma would prefer.
Prospectus: President ---------------------
8. (SBU) Dilma will need signature accomplishments in Congress to raise her presidential profile to compete with Sao
Paulo Governor Jose Serra (PSDB), the front-runner for the Presidency. Serra is pulling 36 to 43 percent in recent
polls, roughly 20 points ahead of Dilma, who has seen her support on the left eroded by PSB candidate Ciro Gomes and PV
candidate Marina Silva, both of whom are polling nearly even with Dilma. Heloisa Helena (PSoL), though barely visible in
the news for months and possibly not even running, also polls around 10 percent. Serra has benefitted immensely from the
negative publicity created by PT's marriage of convenience with the PMDB (ref A). Also, Dilma's perceived lack of
charisma makes her, in the words of Sen. Azeredo (PSDB), "the perfect opponent" for Serra because she is unable to take
advantage of Serra's own lack of personal magnetism. The difficulty for Serra, who enjoyed a similarly strong early lead
when running for President in 2002, will be to translate the support from his base to other parts of the country and to
lower income brackets. Recent state polls indicate that Serra's support tops 50 percent in Sao Paulo and nearly so in
the three states to the south, but falls to the 10-25 percent range everywhere else, including Rio and Brasilia. Many
PSDB leaders are pushing reluctant Minas Gerais Governor Aecio Neves (ref D & E), who would rather be President himself or perhaps President of the Senate, to accept the vice-presidency to shore up
support from his large state and potentially put an all-PSDB ticket over the top.
9. (SBU) Observers from all sides acknowledge that, barring a major health crisis for Dilma or Serra, the "x factor" in
this campaign will happen in the final weeks, when Lula's undereducated base in the northeast starts to pay attention to
the race. In a country where less than ten percent of voters belong to a political party but voting is mandatory and
voter participation rates run in the high 90s, final election results do not reflect the early polls. The advisor to a
prominent opposition parliamentarian from Pernambuco told poloff that he expects Serra to win the first round, but
expects Dilma to rise dramatically in the last week out of voter loyalty to Lula. In the second round, he worries, "If
they add up the votes of all four of them (Dilma, Ciro, Marina, Helena), they win." Another opposition party advisor
from the Northeast told poloff to watch out for Ciro, whom he characterized as "the only person who can beat Serra, even
if he doesn't win himself." Ciro has lately been playing an attack dog role in the campaign against Serra, while Dilma
and Serra have been reluctant to engage one another directly.
Prospectus: Parliament and Governors ------------------------------------
10. (C) Governor, Senate, Federal Deputy, and State Deputy races in each state will be heavily influenced by the needs
of the leading parties in the Presidential race. The key dynamic to watch will be between PMDB, which wants to retain
its position as the party with the most seats in all four categories, and PT, which is under pressure to throw support
behind PMDB candidates in order to shore up support for Dilma's presidential bid. With few candidates officially
declared, it is too early to predict how these races will go, but the general consensus in Brasilia is that PSDB stock
is rising and PMDB falling at the federal level. The PMDB already lost two senators and ten deputies in party-switching
season, and legislators are increasingly confident that PMDB will lose its pre-eminent position at the federal level. In
a reference to the damage done by the recent scandal involving Senate President Jose Sarney, Sen. Virgilio told poloff,
"Thanks to Sarney, PMDB is about to become a state-level party." A PT-affiliated Senate advisor told us much the same,
but believed that PT and smaller parties within the governing coalition, rather than the opposition, would gain at PMDB
expense. At the state level, PMDB remains in solid position to retain or increase its governorships, with strong
candidates in key states such as Rio de Janeiro, Minas Gerais (PSDB-held), and Bahia (PT-held).
Comment: Stay Tuned! --------------------
11. (C) While Brazil's 20l0 national elections appear to be moving toward a PT-PSDB presidential showdown, with Serra
leading and Dilma expected to make up ground toward the end, it will be months before dependable outlines of the
election environment take shape. The first few months of 2010 will bring focus, as candidates officially declare,
state-level alliances with national implications further crystallize, and ministers depart their posts. The late
2009-early 2010 dynamic between Congress and Lula, who will be in a hurry to pass legislation ranging from Pre-Salt to
social program reform to Mercosul accession, may bring to the forefront policy differences in an election race that has
thus far been about personalities and image. Even if policy issues do not grow in importance, the debates will indicate
how the two major coalitions, if elected, could address issues of interest to the United States. End comment.
KUBISKE