Where Voting matter: Brazil -- Emily Wilburn

Brazil uses two different systems being the majority and proportional, to define the winners of the election depending on the office being elected. All Executive positions (the president, governors, and mayors) and Senate races are decided according to the majority system, in which the candidate with the most votes wins. The remaining votes, i.e. those for the Chamber of Deputies and municipal and state legislatures, are decided according to the proportional system. President and governor races also follow the two-round system, in which a run-off election occurs when no candidate obtains more than half of all valid votes, this will happen October 28th this year. Voters choose a specific candidate for each position to be filled and their choice is kept confidential, all votes are strictly confidential.
The two candidates running are Jair Bolsonaro of the Social Liberal Party and Fernando Hadad of the Workers Party. One of the major reasons the Brazil election is being so talked about right now is because of Jair Bolsonaro, and the controversy surrounding him. he has been in Congress since 1991 and is a former army captain. One of the reasons he is getting so man votes is because he wants to assist in lowering crime rates, in specific murder. He is known for making poor comments about women and minorities and is extremely right sided.

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