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Brazil: Lula leads polls for the 2022 presidential elections
According to a survey conducted by the Datafolha Institute, it gives the former president 48% of the voting intentions, compared to 22% for the current president, Jair Bolsonaro.
The former leftist president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, would win the first round of the electoral appointment in October 2022 in Brazil, expanding the advantage against the far-right president Jair Bolsonaro, according to a survey delivered by Brazilian media.
Although he has not yet stated whether he will be a candidate, a decision he says he will make early next year, Lula, 76, would get 48% of the votes against Bolsonaro, who would have 22%, according to a Study by the Datafolha Institute distributed by the Folha de São Paulo newspaper.
The supposed "third way" appears behind, according to the panorama directed face to face among 3,666 citizens over 16 years of age in 191 urban areas of the country between December 13 and 16, with a margin of error of two percentage points.
The former judge and former Bolsonaro minister, Sergio Moro, icon of the anti-corruption operation Lava Jato that led to Lula's arrest, gets 9% of the interest, while the former governor of Ceara, Ciro Gomes, 7% and the governor of São Paulo, Joao Doria, 4%. 8% selected a null vote and 2% have no idea.