Brazil debates da Silva jailing impact on presidential race
RIO DE JANEIRO — With former Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva behind bars, the people of Latin America’s largest nation are pondering how October’s presidential election will be affected by the jailing of the poll front-runner.
Questions and confusion about his future come as Brazil remains deeply divided over his conviction, whether he should be allowed to run and whether the sprawling “Car Wash” corruption investigation that has ensnared many in the country’s political and business elite has gone too far.
Three weeks have passed since da Silva began his 12-year sentence for a corruption conviction, yet leaders of his leftist Workers’ Party still insist the once widely popular leader will be on the ballot as their candidate.
While there is a narrow path by which that could happen, legal and political experts say it is unlikely. To get on the ballot, da Silva would need an avalanche of favourable legal decisions in a justice system that is notoriously slow.