Rousseff rides economic boom to Brazil’s presidency

SAO PAULO, (Reuters) – Former guerrilla leader Dilma  Rousseff won Brazil’s presidential election in resounding  fashion yesterday after promising to stick to policies that  have lifted millions from poverty and made Brazil one of the  world’s hottest economies.

The ruling party’s candidate won 55.96 percent of valid  votes compared to 44.04 percent for the opposition’s Jose  Serra, with 99 percent of ballots counted.

Hundreds of supporters gathered on the streets of Sao Paulo  and the capital Brasilia, dancing and waving red flags for both  the Workers’ Party and the labor unions that form its base.

The result completed an unlikely journey for Rousseff that  took her from jail and brutal torture by her military captors  in the 1970s to become the first woman to lead Latin America’s  largest economy.

An economist and former energy minister who leans left but  has become more pragmatic over time, Rousseff had never run for  elected office. Yet she received decisive support from Brazil’s  wildly popular President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who plucked  her from relative obscurity to succeed him.

“I think she will continue Lula’s work,” said Elizabete  Gomes da Silva, a factory worker in Sao Paulo. “He governed for  the people who needed him most — the poorest.”

During Lula’s eight years in office, his stable fiscal  policies and social programs helped lift 20 million Brazilians,  or more than 10 percent of the population, out of poverty.

The burgeoning middle class is snapping up cars and  building houses at a pace never seen in Brazil before, helping  make it a rare bright spot in the global economy along with  other developing giants such as China and India.

That legacy was simply too much for Serra to overcome.

Serra mustered just enough support in the first round of  voting on Oct. 3 to force a runoff, and briefly closed in on  Rousseff in subsequent polls. But she pulled away in the final  two weeks as the focus shifted away from her views on social  issues such as abortion and back to Lula’s economic record.

Rousseff is Lula’s former chief of staff and vows to build  on his successes by upgrading Brazil’s woeful roads, schools  and other infrastructure as the country prepares to host the  2014 World Cup and 2016 Olympic Games.

She also seeks to exploit Brazil’s newfound offshore oil  wealth and expand the state’s role in the energy sector while  continuing to court private investment.

“Her government will focus primarily on solving Brazil’s  bottlenecks,” Fernando Pimentel, a close adviser to her  campaign, said in a recent interview.

Rousseff lacks Lula’s charisma or his clout in Congress,  and some investors worry hers could be a status-quo presidency  in which she fails to pass economic reforms that could reduce  Brazil’s high cost of doing business.

Some also fear she could expand the state’s role too much  in some areas while failing to rein in heavy budget spending,  which has pressured Brazil’s real and helped make it the  world’s most overvalued currency by some measures.

Still, Brazil’s stock market, bonds and currency all posted  gains in the run-up to the vote — a stark contrast to the  financial panic that preceded the 2002 election of Lula, a  former radical.

FROM JAIL TO
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CONFIDANT

Rousseff’s road to the presidency of the world’s  eighth-biggest economy was hardly traditional.

The daughter of a well-to-do Bulgarian immigrant, Rousseff  joined a leftist guerrilla group during the 1960s and resisted  the military dictatorship of that era. She was then jailed for  three years and repeatedly tortured with electric shocks.

Upon her release from prison in 1973, she moderated her  views and studied economics. She ascended through a range of  mid-level government posts in southern Brazil and never showed  much political ambition until Lula made her his energy  minister, his chief of staff, and then his chosen successor.

Lula has acknowledged Rousseff lacks political experience  but chose her because of her skill as a technocrat and  administrator.
He says those qualities will be critical over the next four  years as Brazil tries to bring its infrastructure in line with  its ambitions as an emerging world power.

Lula, 65, was barred by the constitution from running for a  third consecutive term, but the election of a close lieutenant  without a long-standing base of her own may also allow him to  remain involved in policy after he steps down on Jan. 1.

On the eve of the election, Rousseff herself said: “Lula  will always be present in my government.”