How Elections Work in Brazil
Brazil elects on the national level a head of state –
the president – and a legislature. The president is elected to a four-year term
by absolute majority vote through a two-round system. The National Congress
(Congresso Nacional) has two chambers. The Chamber of Deputies (Câmara dos
Deputados) has 513 members, elected to a four-year term by proportional
representation. The Federal Senate (Senado Federal) has 81 members, elected to
an eight-year term, with elections every four years for alternatively one-third
and two-third of the seats. Brazil has a multi-party system, with such numerous
parties that often no one party has a chance of gaining power alone, and so
they must work with each other to form coalition governments. From the source: wikipedia
The Electoral System
Since independence Brazil has experimented with almost
every possible electoral system: single and multimember districts, and
proportional representation with various formulas. Only the so-called mixed
systems are yet to be tried. Election day is always a national holiday. Until
1965 national and state elections were held on October 3, but the military
moved the date to November 15 (Day of the Republic, a military holiday). The
constitution of 1988 reestablished October 3 (ninety days before the inauguration
of executive-branch elected officials) for the first round of voting, and
November 15 for runoff elections when needed. As of 1998, first-round elections
will be held on the first Sunday in October and runoff second rounds on the
last Sunday of October.
Brazilian election laws are very complex and detailed.
The law requires that all candidates who hold executive positions resign six
months before the election. No
"write-in" candidacies are allowed; only candidates officially
presented by a registered political party may participate. Parties choose their
candidates in municipal, state, or national conventions. Although the
legislation does not recognize party primaries officially, on occasion they
have been used informally.
Voting is considered both a right and a duty in
Brazil; thus, registration and voting are compulsory between the ages of
eighteen and seventy. Illiterates vote, but their voting registration card
identifies their status, and they sign the voting list with a fingerprint on
election day. The 1988 constitution lowered the voting age, permitting sixteen-
and seventeen-year-olds to vote on a voluntary basis. In 1994 these young
voters (who cannot legally drink or drive) totaled 2,132,190 (2.2 percent of
the electorate). For these reasons, turnouts for all elections in Brazil are
very high, usually more than 85 percent. At certain times, voters have cast
blank and void ballots as a means of protest, especially in 1970, when military
oppression was at its height.
Before 1966 individual paper ballots were used for
each office, and the voter placed the appropriate set in an envelope, which was
inserted into the ballot box. Since 1966 unified single ballots have been used
for simultaneous elections. In 1996 fifty-one of Brazil's largest cities used a
new electronic voting machine with great success. In 1998 some 90 million
voters will use this new technique, which may become a hot export item. For
majority elections, candidates' names are listed in random order, and the voter
must mark the respective box. For proportional elections, the voter can write
the name or identification (ID) number of the candidate, or write the symbol or
ID number of the party preference. There is no alternative to making a straight
party vote for all offices on the ballot. This procedure is extremely
complicated for voters with little schooling. In elections in the first half of
the 1990s, many voted for one or two executive offices and left the rest of the
ballot blank.
Before Congress adopted Law No. 8,713 in September
1993, there were few restrictions on campaign finances. Businesses and labor
unions could not make political contributions. Individual persons could
contribute to parties, but not to individual candidates. Parties were required
to submit their accounting to the TSE (Superior Electoral Court), countersigned
by each other. In 1994 contributions from individual businesses (but not labor
unions) were legalized, and electoral bonus (bônus eleitoral ) receipts were
issued to contributors, who have often used them to evade taxes.
In 1994 Law No. 8,713 also required parties and
candidates to submit to the electoral courts detailed balance sheets listing
contributors and expenses. These reports were made public and hastily analyzed
by the press. Cardoso's presidential campaign listed expenses of nearly R$32
million, about one real per vote, and contributions from banks, large
construction firms, and businesses.
Brazil has four types of majority elections: the
president, governors, and mayors are elected by absolute majorities; senators,
by simple majorities. In elections for president, governors, and mayors of
cities with more than 200,000 voters, a runoff is required between the top two
candidates if no one receives an absolute majority in the first round (50
percent plus at least one vote). The president, governors, and mayors have
their respective vice president, vice governors, and vice mayors, who are
elected on unified slates.
The May 1994 constitutional revision reducing the presidential
term from five to four years unified the terms of the president, state
governors, and Congress. State and national elections are scheduled for 1998
and 2002, two years out of phase with municipal elections, which are set for
1996 and 2000.
Three senators are elected by simple majority to
represent each of the twenty-six states and the Federal District. They are
elected to alternating eight-year terms: one seat will be contested in 1998 and
the other two in 2002. Each senator has an alternate elected on a unified
ticket, usually from another party in the coalition. If the senator elected
takes leave, dies, resigns, or is expelled, the alternate takes over.
Brazil uses an open-list d'Hondt proportional
representation system to elect federal and state deputies and city council
members. Each party or coalition selects its list of candidates, which is
registered with the respective Electoral Court in June. Coalition partners lose
their identity and compete in a single "basket" of votes. Coalitions
are very important for proportional representation elections in Brazil. In 1962
nearly 50 percent of federal deputies were elected through coalitions. With the
surge of new parties created after 1985, coalitions again appeared in the 1986,
1990, and 1996 elections. These coalitions accounted for nearly 90 percent of
those elected.
In proportional representation elections, voters have
the option of making a party vote. Usually, however, the proportional
representation campaigns are so individualized (many candidates never mention
their party label in their propaganda) that the party vote is very small (8
percent in 1994). An exception is the Workers' Party, which received 33 percent
of its votes for federal deputy as party votes in 1994.
From the source: http://countrystudies.us/brazil/100.htm
From the source: http://countrystudies.us/brazil/100.htm
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