2014 Brazilian general election

2014 Brazilian general election

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Presidential election
5 October 2014 (first round)
26 October 2014 (second round)
Opinion polls
Turnout80.61% (first round)
78.90% (second round)
 
Nominee Dilma Rousseff Aécio Neves
Party PT PSDB
Alliance For Brazil to Keep on Changing Change Brazil
Running mate Michel Temer Aloysio Nunes
Popular vote 54,501,118 51,041,155
Percentage 51.64% 48.36%


President before election

Dilma Rousseff
PT

Elected President

Dilma Rousseff
PT

Chamber of Deputies

All 513 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
257 seats needed for a majority
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
PT Vicente Paulo da Silva 13.94 69 −19
PSDB Antônio Imbassahy 11.39 54 +1
PMDB Eduardo Cunha 11.10 66 −13
PP Eduardo da Fonte 6.61 38 −5
PSB Beto Albuquerque 6.44 34 0
PSD 6.14 36 New
PR Bernardo Santana 5.79 34 −7
Republicanos George Hilton 4.55 21 +13
DEM Mendonça Filho 4.20 21 −21
PTB Jovair Arantes 4.02 25 +4
PDT Félix Mendonça Jr. 3.57 19 −9
Solidarity 2.77 15 New
PSC André Moura 2.59 13 −5
PV Sarney Filho 2.06 8 −7
PROS 2.03 11 New
PPS Rubens Bueno 2.01 10 −2
PCdoB Jandira Feghali 1.97 10 −5
PSOL Ivan Valente 1.79 5 +2
PHS None 0.95 5 +3
PTdoB Luis Tibé 0.84 1 −2
PSL None 0.83 1 0
PRP Francisco Sampaio 0.75 3 +1
PTN None 0.74 4 +4
PEN 0.69 2 New
PSDC 0.52 2 +2
PMN 0.48 3 −1
PRTB 0.47 1 −1
PTC 0.35 2 +1
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Federal Senate

27 of the 81 seats in the Federal Senate
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
PSDB Aloysio Nunes 26.73 10 −1
PT Humberto Costa 16.96 12 −3
PMDB Eunício Oliveira 13.58 18 −1
PSB Rodrigo Rollemberg 13.57 7 +4
PSD 8.00 3 New
PDT Acir Gurgacz 4.04 8 +4
DEM José Agripino 3.93 5 −1
PTB Gim Argello 3.14 3 −3
PROS 2.50 1 New
PP Francisco Dornelles 2.16 5 0
PSOL Randolfe Rodrigues 1.17 1 −1
PCdoB Vanessa Grazziotin 0.90 1 −1
PV Paulo Davim 0.81 1 +1
PR Alfredo Nascimento 0.78 4 0
Solidarity 0.41 1 New
Republicanos Marcelo Crivella 0.34 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.

General elections were held in Brazil on 5 October 2014 to elect the president, the National Congress, and state governorships.[1] As no candidate in the presidential election received more than 50% of the vote in the first round on 5 October 2014, a second-round runoff was held on 26 October 2014.[1]

Elections were held in the midst of the devastating 2014 Brazilian economic crisis.[2] President Dilma Rousseff of the left-wing Workers' Party ran for reelection, choosing incumbent Vice President Michel Temer of the centre-right Brazilian Democratic Movement as her running-mate. During her first term, Rousseff's presidency was rocked by the 2013 protests in Brazil, initiated mainly by the Free Fare Movement, in response to social inequality in the country.[3]

Aécio Neves, a senator from the electorally-crucial[4] state of Minas Gerais and the grandson of former president-elect Tancredo Neves, entered the race as the candidate of the centre-right Brazilian Social Democracy Party. Neves, who previously served as a popular Governor of Minas Gerais,[5] had previously considered running for president in 2010 before ultimately declining. Unlike in past presidential elections, the PSDB ticket consisted of two members of the party, with São Paulo Senator Aloysio Nunes serving as his running mate.

Former Pernambuco Governor Eduardo Campos, who had served with Rousseff in the left-wing Lula administration, entered the race as a centre-left alternative to Rousseff on the Brazilian Socialist Party (PSB) ticket.[6] For his running mate, Campos chose Marina Silva, an environmentalist politician from the state of Acre who performed unexpectedly well in the 2010 presidential election. However, Campos unexpectedly died in a plane crash less than two months before the first round of voting, and Silva replaced him at the top of the ticket.

In the first round of voting, Dilma Rousseff won 41.6% of the vote, ahead of Aécio Neves with 33.6% and Marina Silva with 21.3%.[7] Rousseff and Neves contested the runoff on 26 October, and Rousseff won re-election by a narrow margin, 51.6% to Neves' 48.4%, the closest margin for a Brazilian presidential election since 1989.[8]

  1. ^ a b "TSE aprova calendário e divulga datas das eleições de 2014". Terra. 22 May 2013. Retrieved 2 December 2013.
  2. ^ "Brazil Fell Into Recession in First Half of Year, as Investments Dropped". The New York Times. Reuters. 2014-08-29. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-11-14.
  3. ^ "Gestão Pública: Dilma Rousseff". ISTOÉ Independente (in Brazilian Portuguese). 2013-11-29. Archived from the original on 2020-11-16. Retrieved 2020-11-14.
  4. ^ "Roadmap to Brazil's presidency: win in Minas Gerais". The Brazilian Report. 2018-08-20. Retrieved 2020-11-14.
  5. ^ "Blame It On Aécio". Columbia Journalism Review. Retrieved 2020-11-14.
  6. ^ "Campos-Silva ticket confirmed in Brazil 2014 election". BBC News. 2014-04-14. Retrieved 2020-11-14.
  7. ^ "Eleições 2014 – Resultados das Eleições 2014 para Presidente". Archived from the original on 2019-09-09. Retrieved 2020-05-28.
  8. ^ "Dilma Rousseff re-elected Brazilian president". BBC Online. 26 October 2014. Retrieved 26 October 2014.