Then he scored two goals against Austria and decided the match. Once the World Cup is over, the electoral campaign will begin. By October, he will need to unlock a dissonance in the research. According to Ipec, 50% of those interviewed disapprove of their government. Second against 32% satisfied. Okay, missing a penalty, Messi is no longer the same.
Fulanizing the dispute, against 31% in the first round. The third way skates with e (3%), plus e (2%).
A president disapproved by half of those interviewed is preferred with a ten percentage point advantage over the second-placed president. Scoring a goal a few minutes later, Messi is the World Cup’s top scorer.
It is obvious that the third-way candidates have not yet taken off and, given the way things are going, they are unlikely to take off. There are many explanations, but so far none of them have established an identity. Neither does Flávio Bolsonaro, except for the dynastic connection.
After the four tumultuous years of , voters seem to want peace with Lula, even though they don’t like his government. This situation can be explained by imagining a voter who saw in Bolsonaro Sr. a president who did not like vaccines during an epidemic nor electronic voting machines in an election. Flávio would be something new, but so far his only strong ally is called and lives in .
Trump is in the middle of his second term. There is not a single measure that came out of the White House that was sympathetic to Brazil. Others, such as the cancellation of visas by Brazilian authorities, were clearly arbitrary and unsympathetic, a product of the Bolsonaro cavalcade through the White House.
Until October, Washington’s trouble factory will produce news, but Lula and him seem to have metabolized Donald Trump, associating him with tariffs and threats to national sovereignty. The PT’s opponents who hitched their charanga to the American president’s locomotive went thirsty for the pot. The wine in this glass is vinegar.
A long time ago, when General Emílio Médici governed Brazil, he was received in Washington by President Richard Nixon. To smear it, the American said that “wherever Brazil goes, all of Latin America will go.” The government fans rejoiced, but chancellor Mário Gibson Barboza felt the taste of vinegar: “It’s the kiss of death.” There was no other way, after all, Gibson was an experienced diplomat.
After Trump’s first tariff, Brazilian exports to the United States fell to their lowest level in 30 years. For Trump this news is good. For Bolsonaro, who celebrated the measure, the bill will come in October. They created an unprecedented scenario: voters don’t like the government, but, for now, they prefer to keep Lula in Planalto. The dissonances in the June polls show what is known.
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