2012 Brazilian municipal elections explained

Election Name:2012 Brazilian municipal elections
Country:Brazil
Type:legislative
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2008 Brazilian municipal elections
Previous Year:2008
Next Election:2016 Brazilian municipal elections
Next Year:2016
Election Date:October 7, 2012
Seats For Election:Mayors and councillors of all the 5,568 municipalities of Brazil
Leader1:Rui Falcão
Party1:Workers' Party (Brazil)
Last Election1:550 mayors
Seats1:628
Seat Change1:+78
Popular Vote1:17,260,000
Percentage1:16.79%
Leader2:Valdir Raupp
Party2:Brazilian Democratic Movement Party
Last Election2:1,193 mayors
Seats2:1,025
Seat Change2:–168
Popular Vote2:16,716,000
Percentage2:16.26%
Leader3:Sérgio Guerra
Party3:Brazilian Social Democratic Party
Last Election3:787 mayors
Seats3:693
Seat Change3:–94
Popular Vote3:13,950,000
Percentage3:13.57%
Leader4:Gilberto Kassab
Party4:PSD
Last Election4:not contest
Seats4:490
Seat Change4:+490
Color4:FFCC00
Leader5:Ciro Nogueira
Party5:PP
Last Election5:551 mayors
Seats5:469
Seat Change5:-82
Color5:008B8B
Leader6:Eduardo Campos
Party6:PSB
Last Election6:310 mayors
Seats6:443
Seat Change6:+133
Color6:FF0000

The Brazilian municipal elections of 2012 took place on October 7 and on October 28 (for cities with more than 200,000 voters, where the second round is available). Over 138 million voters chose mayors, deputy mayors and city councillors for the 5,568 municipalities of Brazil.[1] [2] These were the first elections in which the recently registered parties Partido Pátria Livre (PPL) and Partido Social Democrático (PSD) participated; they were both recognized by the Superior Electoral Court (Tribunal Superior Eleitoral  - TSE) in 2011.[3] Political parties whose candidates wished to run for the 2012 elections had to be registered at the TSE for at least one year before the election date, while candidates also had to be affiliated to a party for the same period of time.[4] Conventions for the selection of candidates within the parties occurred between 10 and 30 June, while the registry of candidates and alliances with the Regional Electoral Courts (Tribunais Regionais Eleitorais  - TREs) took place until July 5. Electoral campaign was authorized from the moment a candidacy had been registered. The free electoral program (propaganda eleitoral gratuita)  - two daily slots on free-to-air TV and radio for political advertising paid by the Electoral Justice fund  - ran weekdays from 21 August until 4 October. According to the current Brazilian electoral law, the two-round system  - should the leading candidate receive less than 50% +1 of the votes  - is only available for cities with more than 200,000 voters. This includes all state capitals, with the exception of Boa Vista, Roraima and Palmas, Tocantins, plus 59 other municipalities. The free electoral program for the second round ran from 13 October until 26 October.

Below is a list of the cities where the runoff took place (bold denote state capitals). These cities are home to 31 725 967 of the country's total constituency of 140 646 446 registered electors; that is, 22.56% of Brazilian voters went to the polling stations on October 28.

Election results

The following tables' contents can also be found at the Superior Electoral Court website.[5]

Mayoral elections

Mayoral elections, October 7 and October 28
Party number and nameCandidates elected in 1st roundCandidates elected in 2nd round
273 2
52 3
0 0
0 0
305 3
16 0
1014 6
43 0
467 2
11 0
120 3
272 1
79 1
24 0
16 0
434 6
83 0
55 (PSD) 491 3
699 9
9 0
23 0
1 1
0 0
623 8
24 0
293 0
18 1
12 0
94 1

City councillors' elections

City councillors' elections, October 7
Party number and nameCandidates elected
3267
972
5
0
3657
547
7944
604
4927
177
1855
3175
1205
579
414
3548
1462
55 (PSD) 4655
5251
446
755
49
2
5174
534
3572
484
429
1575

See also

Notes and References

  1. Rádio Gaúcha. "TSE divulga datas das eleições municipais de 2012" . Zero Hora. 8 July 2011.
  2. UOL Eleições. "Eleitorado brasileiro cresce 6%, e supera os 138 milhões; mulheres são maioria". BOL. 30 July 2012.
  3. Murilo Matias. "Novos partidos, PSD e PPL estreiam nas urnas neste ano". Terra. 28 June 2012.
  4. http://noticias.r7.com/brasil/noticias/eleicoes-de-2012-serao-nos-dias-7-e-28-de-outubro-20110629.html "Eleições de 2012 serão nos dias 7 e 28 de outubro"
  5. Superior Electoral Court of Brazil. "Estatísticas Eleições 2012". TSE website. October 2012.