Perhaps you are accompanying presidential elections here in Brazil. It is quite a race. There are two women and two men candidates. A few days prior to Election Day, Sunday, October 3, according to national surveys the two women together had over two-thirds of the votes. One, Dilma, had over 50%. The returns that night Dilma got only 46%, and wasn´t elected, since here in Brazil, on the first ballot, over 50% is needed to be elected. So now, the elective process goes into the second stage. The two candidates who got the most votes will battle for votes until next Election Day, Sunday, Oct 31, for the second round of ballots. There will be governors also in the race. Here in Brazil the whole nation has electronic voting, so returns are quick. By 8-9 P.M., the race is decided and public.
Dilma is the candidate of the popular workers party. She has been a national figure with the president going out of office, Lula Ignacio da Silva, after eight rather successful years. She represents the on going financial and social stability that Lula brought to the country though social programs that produced jobs and money in pocket for the lower classes. Today, unemployment is less that 6.8%! And the economy is healthy.
The other candidate, José Serra, represents the other parties, those against populist government that doesn´t favor much the rich and industrialists. Media seems to favor Serra, and heavily criticizes Dilma.
It is unfortunate that some members of the Catholic Church, like what happened in USA, favored Republicans over Democrats solely on abortion issue.
Opposition tried their best to accuse Dilma as pro-abortionist, and Serra pro-life. Both are labels unfounded. The National Conference of Brazilian Bishops even spoke out, calling for ethical communication, and not to confuse religious beliefs with democratic process.