>>3379131on the other side we have Haddad, Labour Party candidate. They used to rule Brazil until 2016, before the impeachment of Dilma, but their ties at our congress are so deeply formed it's still hard to let go. Their 'leader' (I will say this way because he's not their party president anymore, but still giving the cards from inside the jail in Curitiba) is jailed for active corruption, stole from Petrobras, also he's having issues around the world, backing up Venezuela's president Maduro, major corruption charges in Portugal and Africa. Like Bolsonaro, he's also a populist. His party is the center of major investigations and some party heads are already in jail, facing criminal charges.
Haddad I guess is a more delicate subject to talk about since his strategy was the old PT strategy, focusing on poor people, the cliche left thinking may I say. But he changed it. They changed their red colour to green and yellow, change their targets but now things are getting weird. They got support from some 'criminal party' groups in Brazil called MSTS, made legal actions against Whatsapp (censorship), saying the app had changed the election direction spreading lies and fake news, bought influence online from Brazilian YouTubers, and now they are being investigated for False Flag Attacks.
the whole scenario had changed and Haddad is desperate not to win, but to take Bolsonaro down. no matter what it will costs.
>>3379135thanks anon. this election is already lost for Brazilian people. I'm feeling sad. both of them are the worse...