(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India
(Marxist)
Vol. XXXIV
No.
45
November
07,
2010
Dilma Rousseff Wins
Presidential Elections in Brazil
BRAZIL'S
voters elected 62-year-old former Marxist guerilla Dilma Rousseff as
the
country's first woman president in a run-off election. She stood as the
candidate of the ruling Workers' Party (PT) and was supported by the
Communist
Party of Brazil (PCdoB).
President-elect Dilma Rousseff pledged to
eradicate poverty in her country on the back of an electoral triumph in
which
she secured 56 per cent of the vote. Delivering her victory speech
before thousands
of cheering supporters in the capital Brasilia,
she said the eradictation of poverty remained her "fundamental"
promise. "We must not rest while there are Brazilians going hungry,"
she declared. "I humbly ask for the support of all who can help the
country
bridge the gap dividing us and make us a developed nation," she told
the
crowd. She paid tribute to popular outgoing president Luiz Inacio Lula
da Silva
and said she knew "how to advance and consolidate his work." And
Rousseff vowed "to honour" the women of Brazil, saying she hoped
her win
would allow "fathers and mothers to look their daughters in the eye and
say, 'Yes, a woman can'."
As a 19-year-old economics student in 1967
Rousseff joined a militant left-wing group waging a guerilla campaign
against
the US-backed junta that overthrew the progressive administration of
Joao
Goulart. She was a key player in an armed militant group that resisted
the
dictatorship from the 1960s to the 1980s. After three years operating
underground she was captured by Brazil's
military police and was considered such a big enough catch that a
military
prosecutor labelled her the "Joan of Arc" of the guerilla movement.
She was subsequently jailed and tortured for three years.A cancer survivor, she was a minister of energy
and chief of staff to Lula.
After her release, she moved to southern Brazil
in 1973
where she was reunited with her now ex-husband Carlos Araujo, an
imprisoned
militant. As Brazil's
dictatorship
began to loosen its grip in the late 1970s Rousseff threw herself
into the emerging political process. Following roles in city and state
governments she served for two years as the country's energy minister
after Lula
took office in 2003. She became his chief of staff in 2005, a position
she held
until resigning earlier this year to campaign in the election.
Rousseff paid tribute to the outgoing
president and assured Brazilians that while he would not have an
official role
in her government, he would always be close at hand. Rousseff pledged
to
continue Lula's popular social programmes which have pulled 20 million
Brazilians out of poverty since he took office in 2003. "I want to
unite Brazil
around a
project not just of material development, but also of values," she told
supporters at the rally. "When we win an election, we must govern for
all
Brazilians without exception."
In an interview published in the newspaper Folha
de Sao Paulo in 2005, Rousseff
ruminated on her years as a militant. "We fought and participated in a
dream to build a better Brazil,"
she said. "We learned a lot. We did a lot of nonsense, but that is not
what characterises us. "What characterises us is to have dared to want
a
better country."
Jose Serra, her opponent in the run-off,
was a former governor of Sao
Paulo
state who was roundly beaten by Lula in the 2002 presidential election.
He
could manage to secure 44 per cent of the votes, thanks to the ganging
up of
the entire right-wing opposition forces.