Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05BRASILIA1874
2005-07-14 19:38:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Brasilia
Cable title:  

BRAZIL: LULA'S APPROVAL INCREASES AMIDST

Tags:  PGOV PREL ECON BR 
pdf how-to read a cable
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
UNCLAS BRASILIA 001874 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV PREL ECON BR
SUBJECT: BRAZIL: LULA'S APPROVAL INCREASES AMIDST
CORRUPTION SCANDAL

REF: A. BRASILIA 1819

B. BRASILIA 1849

C. BRASILIA 1867
UNCLAS BRASILIA 001874

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV PREL ECON BR
SUBJECT: BRAZIL: LULA'S APPROVAL INCREASES AMIDST
CORRUPTION SCANDAL

REF: A. BRASILIA 1819

B. BRASILIA 1849

C. BRASILIA 1867

1.(SBU) SUMMARY. A Sensus survey published in Brazil on July
12 reported a 2.5% increase in President Lula's approval
rating since May. While ongoing investigations of scandals
have greatly tarnished his PT party's image over the past few
weeks, Lula thus far has been successful in disassociating
himself from the corruption allegations and remains the
front-runner in the 2006 presidential elections. END
SUMMARY.

FAITH IN THE PRESIDENT, NOT THE PARTY
--------------

2.(U) The July 12 CNT-Sensus survey indicates that President
Lula's approval rating rose from 57% in May to 60% in July.
The survey was conducted between July 5-7, following the
series of corruption revelations that started on May 22, but
before some of the more recent revelations involving Lula's
Workers' Party (PT) (reftels). When asked who was more
involved in the corruption scandals, the voters replied:
Congress (35%); the PT (31%); and Lula (12%). Almost half of
those surveyed--46%--felt Lula was unaware of the vote-buying
scheme, while 34% felt he knew about it. The Sensus results
coincided with the Ipsos-Opinion survey taken June 21-29 and
published in the weekly Veja magazine. According to this
survey, 45% said that "Lula knew nothing about the corruption
scandal"; 39% said he "knew something but did nothing to
correct the situation"; and only 16% thought that Lula "knew
about the scandal and was involved." The Ipsos-Opinion
survey also found that 55% believed Lula to be an honest
politician, while only 36% deemed the PT to be honest.
According to Sensus poll projections for the October 2006
elections, Lula would defeat Jose Serra, PSDB mayor of Sao
Paulo and Lula's opponent in 2002, by a margin of nearly 14
points.

COMMENT:
--------------

3.(SBU) Despite the corruption scandal, Lula is riding out
the storm, averaging approval ratings comparable to when he
first came into office. These surveys indicate that his
personal image has not yet been irreparably tarnished by the
corruption scandal. If he is successful in cleaning house
with his ongoing cabinet shuffle (reftel 1867) and keeps the
economy on track, his candidacy for the October 2006 election
should remain viable. This is assuming, though, that no new
revelations emerge tying Lula more directly to the
impropriety, and that continuous media coverage of the crisis
does not change voters' perception of their president's
credibility.
CHICOLA