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1994 Brazilian general election

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FieldValue
countryBrazil
election_date3 October 1994
module{{Infobox election
embedyes
typepresidential
turnout82.24%
election_namePresidential election
previous_election1989 Brazilian presidential election
previous_year1989
next_election1998 Brazilian general election
next_year1998
image_size130x130px
alliance_nameno
image1Fernando Henrique Cardoso in 1994.jpg
candidate1**Fernando Henrique Cardoso**
running_mate1**Marco Maciel**
party1Brazilian Social Democracy Party
alliance1*Union, Work and Progress*
popular_vote1**34,364,961**
percentage1**54.28%**
image2Luíza Erundina-Mário Covas-Celso Daniel-Lula e José Dirceu (1994) (cropped) (cropped).jpg
candidate2Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva
running_mate2Aloizio Mercadante
party2Workers' Party (Brazil)
alliance2*Popular Brazil Front for Citizenship*
popular_vote217,122,127
percentage227.04%
image3Carneiro cropped.jpg
candidate3Enéas Carneiro
running_mate3Roberto Gama
party3Party of the Reconstruction of the National Order
popular_vote34,671,457
percentage37.38%
map_image1994 Brazil Presidential Elections, Round 1.svg
map_captionElection by states, shaded accounding to vote share
titlePresident
before_electionItamar Franco
before_partyNational Reconstruction Party
after_electionFernando Henrique Cardoso
after_partyBrazilian Social Democracy Party
module{{Infobox legislative election
embedyes
election_nameChamber of Deputies
previous_election[1990](1990-brazilian-parliamentary-election)
next_election[1998](1998-brazilian-general-election)
seats_for_election513 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
majority_seats257
party1Brazilian Democratic Movement Party
leader1Orestes Quércia
percentage120.32
seats1107
last_election1108
party2Brazilian Social Democracy Party
leader2Pimenta da Veiga
percentage213.90
seats262
last_election238
party3Liberal Front Party
leader3Jorge Bornhausen
percentage312.85
seats389
last_election383
party4Workers' Party (Brazil)
leader4Rui Falcão
percentage412.82
seats449
last_election435
party5Reform Progressive Party
leader5Esperidião Amin
percentage59.43
seats552
last_election564
party6Democratic Labour Party (Brazil)
leader6Leonel Brizola
percentage67.23
seats634
last_election646
party7Progressive Party (Brazil, 1993)
percentage76.94
seats736
last_election74
party8Brazilian Labour Party (current)
percentage85.21
seats831
last_election838
party9Liberal Party (Brazil, 1985)
leader9Alvaro Valle
percentage93.51
seats913
last_election916
party10Brazilian Socialist Party
percentage102.18
seats1015
last_election1011
party11Communist Party of Brazil
percentage111.24
seats1110
last_election115
party12Social Democratic Party (Brazil, 1987)
percentage120.91
seats123
last_election121
party13Party of National Mobilization
percentage130.56
seats134
last_election131
party14Popular Socialist Party (Brazil)
percentage140.56
seats142
last_election14New
party15Social Christian Party (Brazil)
percentage150.47
seats153
last_election156
party16Progressive Republican Party (Brazil)
leader16Ovasco Roma
percentage160.45
seats161
last_election160
party17National Reconstruction Party
leader17Daniel Tourinho
percentage170.40
seats171
last_election1740
party18Green Party (Brazil)
seats181
last_election18New

General elections were held in Brazil on October 3, 1994, the second to take place under the provisions of the 1988 constitution and the second direct presidential election since 1960.

Elected in 1989, President Fernando Collor of the centre-right National Reconstruction Party (PRN) had resigned in the face of an impeachment trial, resulting in Vice President Itamar Franco succeeding him. Facing a fiscal crisis Franco's government launched the Plano Real ("Real Plan") to stabilize the national economy. With Franco barred from running for a full term, the architect of the Real Plan, Minister of Finance Fernando Henrique Cardoso, was chosen by the PSDB to serve as their presidential candidate in Franco's absence. For the position of Vice President, Cardoso selected former presidential Chief of Staff Marco Maciel of the Liberal Front Party (PFL).

Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, a former labor leader and federal deputy for São Paulo who had narrowly lost the 1989 presidential election, resigned as president of the Workers' Party (PT) to mount a second presidential candidacy. Lula intended to make José Paulo Bisol of the Brazilian Socialist Party (PSB) his running mate as he had in 1989. Bisol was replaced by Lula ally and fellow PT member Aloizio Mercadante on the ticket. In the spring of 1994, Lula appeared an overwhelming favorite over Cardoso, leading with 40% to Cardoso's 12% in an April poll, and by a 41% to 17% margin as of May. The Real Plan proved popular among Lula's own voters, with 70% of Lula supporters indicating their support for the Franco Administration's signature policy, and Lula was damaged by his opposition to the program.

On election day, Cardoso received 54 percent of the vote, negating the need for a second round. He defeated Lula by over 27 points, still a record margin for a presidential election held under democratic conditions. Cardoso notably won every state in the northeast, a region which would later emerge as the PT's political base. The relative success of far-right candidate Enéas Carneiro, a cardiologist who had never won office before and ran as a member of the Party of the Reconstruction of the National Order (PRONA), was also noted; Carneiro received over 7% of the vote, placing him ahead of many established politicians. Carneiro's vote share was the highest received by a far-right presidential candidate until Jair Bolsonaro's victory in 2018.

Background

In 1989, Brazil held its first direct presidential election since 1960 following the end of the military dictatorship in Brazil. Fernando Collor, a young, charismatic leader who had previous served as Governor of Alagoas, won a hotly contested election versus Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva after positioning himself as a political outsider. Just over two years into his presidency, Collor was faced with allegations of corruption by his brother Pedro Collor, and chose to resign in late 1992 rather than face certain conviction and removal in an impeachment trial.

Following his resignation, Vice President Itamar Franco succeeded him in the office. Once in office, Franco switched from the National Reconstruction Party (PRN) to the Brazilian Democratic Movement Party (PMDB). Facing a hyperinflation crisis and popular discontent, Franco's government pushed a fiscal policy known as the Plano Real (Real Plan) to stabilize the economy. Minister of Finance Fernando Henrique Cardoso, an experienced politician who had previously served as Senator from São Paulo and as Franco's Minister of Foreign Affairs, served as the architect of the plan.

Franco was barred from running for a full term in 1994. In Brazil, whenever a vice president serves part of a president's term, even when the president travels abroad, it counts as a full term. At the time, the Constitution did not allow a president to run for immediate reelection. In the absence of Franco, Cardoso would be chosen by the PSDB (a party born from inside the PMDB) as their nominee for President of Brazil in the 1994 election.

Lula's running mate controversy

As he had in 1989, Lula intended for Senator José Paulo Bisol of Rio Grande do Sul, a member of the Brazilian Socialist Party (PSB), to serve as his vice presidential running mate. A former judge, Bisol had a strong reputation as an opponent of corruption, playing a key role in the investigation that ultimately led to President Fernando Collor de Mello's resignation. Additionally, his membership of a party that played a crucial role in the centre-left coalition made his selection attractive to Lula. Bisol's image as a "Mr. Clean" was harmed during campaign season by revelations of wrongdoing as a judge in 1981.

The saga proved damaging to Lula's campaign, and as a result the leadership of the PT looked for a replacement for Bisol on the ticket. Arguing that Bisol should be replaced on the ticket by a fellow member of the PSB, PSB president Miguel Arraes pushed for the selection of Célio de Castro, then serving as Vice Mayor of Belo Horizonte, to replace Bisol as Lula's running mate. Key power-players in the PT, such as party president Rui Falcão, successfully convinced Lula to replace Bisol with Aloizio Mercadante. A co-founder of the PT, Mercadante was then serving as a federal deputy for São Paulo. Mercadante's background as a career economist during a hyperinflation crisis was seen as a plus for PT party leadership.

Campaign of Enéas Carneiro

In the 1989 presidential election, the right-wing nationalist campaign of Enéas Carneiro received attention for Carneiro's exotic image. A short, bald man with a long beard and distinct "coke-bottle" glasses, Carneiro's unusual appearance and signature catchphrase Meu nome é Enéas ("My name is Enéas") gained the cardiologist a following. Nonetheless, Carneiro, who ran as a member of the Party of the Reconstruction of the National Order (PRONA), came 12th in a field of 21 candidates.

In 1994, Carneiro mounted a second bid for the presidency. The entrance of federal deputy Regina Gordilho of Rio de Janeiro, who had been elected as a member of the centre-left Democratic Labour Party, allowed his campaign to receive more guaranteed election time. For the position of Vice President, Carneiro chose Rear Admiral Roberto Gama e Silva to serve as his running mate.

Considered a nationalist and accused by opponents of being a member of the far-right, Carneiro's unexpected third-place finish with over 7% of the national vote was considered a shocking result. Carneiro, who had never been elected to office, received a larger share of the vote than longtime staple of the Brazilian Left Leonel Brizola, who had been a top candidate for the presidency four years prior.

Candidates

PartyCandidateMost relevant political office or occupationPartyRunning mateCoalitionElectoral number
Reform Progressive Party}}"[[File:LogoPPR93renderizado.png100x100pxReform Progressive Party]][[File:Esperidião Amin 1994 (cropped).jpg100pxEsperidião Amin]]
**Esperidião Amin****Governor of Santa Catarina**
(1983–1987)Reform Progressive Party}}"[[File:LogoPPR93renderizado.png100x100pxReform Progressive Party]]**Gardênia Gonçalves**
Democratic Labour Party (Brazil)}}"[[File:PDT logo(1978-2018).png100x100pxDemocratic Labour Party]][[File:Brizola.jpg100pxLeonel Brizola]]
**Leonel Brizola****Governor of Rio de Janeiro**
(1991–1994)Democratic Labour Party (Brazil)}}"[[File:PDT logo(1978-2018).png100x100pxDemocratic Labour Party]][[File:Darcy Ribeiro Senador.jpg100pxDarcy Ribeiro]]
**Darcy Ribeiro**
Workers' Party (Brazil)}}"[[File:PT (Brazil) logo.svg100x100pxWorkers' Party]][[File:Luíza Erundina-Mário Covas-Celso Daniel-Lula e José Dirceu (1994) (cropped) (cropped).jpg100pxLuiz Inácio Lula da Silva]]
**Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva****Member of the Chamber of Deputies from São Paulo**
(1987–1991)Workers' Party (Brazil)}}"[[File:PT (Brazil) logo.svg100x100pxWorkers' Party]][[File:Aloizio mercadante2.jpg100pxAloizio Mercadante]]
**Aloizio Mercadante**
Brazilian Democratic Movement}}"[[File:LogoPMDB94.png100x100pxBrazilian Democratic Movement Party]][[File:Orestes Quércia (17664883676).jpg100pxOrestes Quércia]]
**Orestes Quércia****Governor of São Paulo**
(1987–1991)Brazilian Democratic Movement}}"[[File:LogoPMDB94.png100x100pxBrazilian Democratic Movement Party]][[File:Iris de Araujo.jpg100pxIris de Araújo]]
**Iris de Araújo**
Social Christian Party (Brazil)}}"[[File:100x100pxSocial Christian Party]]**Hernani Fortuna**Admiral of the Brazilian NavySocial Christian Party (Brazil)}}"[[File:100x100pxSocial Christian Party]]**Vítor Nosseis**
National Reconstruction Party}}"[[File:PRN logo.png100x100pxNational Reconstruction Party]]**Carlos Antônio Gomes**National Reconstruction Party}}"[[File:PRN logo.png100x100pxNational Reconstruction Party]]**Dilton Carlos Salomoni**
Brazilian Social Democracy Party}}"[[File:PSDB wordmark.svg100x100pxBrazilian Social Democracy Party]][[File:Fernando Henrique Cardoso (1999).jpg100px]]
**Fernando Henrique Cardoso****Minister of Finance of Brazil**
(1993–1994)Liberal Front Party}}"[[File:Logotipo do Partido da Frente Liberal.svg100x100pxLiberal Front Party]][[File:Marco maciel 2010.jpg100pxMarco Maciel]]
**Marco Maciel**
Party of the Reconstruction of the National Order}}"**Party of the Reconstruction of the National Order** (PRONA)[[File:Carneiro cropped.jpg100pxEnéas Carneiro]]
**Enéas Carneiro****PRONA National President**
(1989–2006)Party of the Reconstruction of the National Order}}"**Party of the Reconstruction of the National Order** (PRONA)**Roberto Gama**

Candidacies denied

PartyCandidateMost relevant political office or occupationPartyRunning mateCoalitionElectoral number
Liberal Party (Brazil, 1985)}}"[[File:Flavio rocha.jpg100px]]
**Flávio Rocha****Member of the Chamber of Deputies from Rio Grande do Norte**
(1987–1995)Liberal Party (Brazil, 1985)}}"
**Jadihel Lohedo Júnior**
Labour Party of Brazil}}"**Caetano Matanó Júnior.**Labour Party of Brazil}}"**Rafael Francisco**

Results

President

Chamber of Deputies

Senate

References

References

  1. The Associated Press. (4 July 2011). "Itamar Franco, Former President of Brazil, Dies at 81". The New York Times.
  2. Almanaque Abril, 28ª ed, 1995
  3. SAYAD, João. Observações sobre o Plano Real. Est. Econ. São Paulo. Vol. 25, Nº Especial, págs. 7-24, 1995-6
  4. (30 October 2001). "Brazil's new Embraer 70-seat jet rivals small Boeing, Airbus planes". [[Waterloo Region Record]].
  5. (2010-09-30). "Lula's legacy for Brazil's next president". BBC News.
  6. "Folha de S.Paulo - PT quer Mercadante para o lugar de Bisol - 27/7/1994".
  7. "Folha de S.Paulo - PT quer Mercadante para o lugar de Bisol - 27/7/1994".
  8. "'Depois da cadeia, Lula dificilmente voltará à política', diz vice da chapa do petista em 89 e 94". BBC News Brasil.
  9. (July 2021). ["Eleição presidencial: o Plano Real na sucessão de Itamar Franco"](https://www.cesop.unicamp.br/vw/1IE*HMDM_MDA_60e3c}}{{Dead link).
  10. Brooke, James. (1994-09-14). "Taming of Inflation Buoys Centrist in Brazil Polls (Published 1994)". The New York Times.
  11. Lapper, Richard. (2018-07-03). "It's Lula Forever in Brazil's Northeast".
  12. "O retorno de Enéas, ícone da extrema-direita e 'herói' de Bolsonaro". BBC News Brasil.
  13. (23 March 1988). "A guerra ao turbante". Veja.com.
  14. Brooke, James. (1992-11-08). "Looting Brazil (Published 1992)". The New York Times.
  15. Rezende, Tatiana Matos. "UNE 70 Anos: "Fora Collor: o grito da juventude cara-pintada"". União Nacional dos Estudantes.
  16. Brooke, James. (1994-12-20). "Pedro Collor, 43, the Brother And Nemesis of Brazil's Ex-Chief (Published 1994)". The New York Times.
  17. "President Itamar Franco - 1992-1994".
  18. (2011-07-04). "Itamar Franco, Former President of Brazil, Dies at 81 (Published 2011)". The New York Times.
  19. (2014-07-03). "The echoes of 1994". The Economist.
  20. "Brazilian corruption commission under pressure".
  21. "Folha de S.Paulo - Lula quer ter Bisol como vice na chapa - 30/4/1994".
  22. (1994-07-15). "Politics: Brazil's Leading Candidate Loses Momentum : Presidential hopeful Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva fights to avoid a runoff. His image is threatened by a scandal surrounding his choice of running mate.".
  23. "Folha de S.Paulo - PT quer Mercadante para o lugar de Bisol - 27/7/1994".
  24. "Resist Newsletter, Sept. 1994 - Core".
  25. "Folha de S.Paulo - PT quer Mercadante para o lugar de Bisol - 27/7/1994".
  26. Moffett, Matt. (2006-06-20). "In Brazil, the Party Line Is Often Blurry". Wall Street Journal.
  27. ""Meu nome é Enéas": lenda da extrema-direita influenciou Bolsonaro, diz Le Monde".
  28. "Folha de S.Paulo - Enéas não é Enéas - 30/9/1994".
  29. "Como preocupação com interesse estrangeiro levou militares a criar reserva extinta por Temer". BBC News Brasil.
  30. Wille, José. (October 2020). "O folclórico Enéas queria ser presidente em 1994 {{!}} Portal Memória Brasileira".
  31. Rohter, Larry. (2002-10-21). "Long Treated as a Joke, Brazilian Neofascist May Have the Last Laugh (Published 2002)". The New York Times.
  32. (2004-06-23). "Leonel Brizola, 82; Brazilian Politician".
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