Em Defesa do Meio Ambiente No Combate a Corrupçao Pública Músicas que o mundo curte informações- Bem vindos Gladiators of World All Together in Defense of Life Environmental Defense public in fighting corruption this blog is a salad but adding to those who believe in a better world
sexta-feira, 31 de outubro de 2014
quinta-feira, 30 de outubro de 2014
quarta-feira, 29 de outubro de 2014
PARABENS REDE RECORD
NOSSOS PARABENS A REDE RECORD PELA COBERTURA
DAS ELEIÇÕES 2014 . DE FORMA IMPARCIAL
DEU A REDE BANDEIRANTE E GLOBO QUE CLARAMENTE
USARAM DE MEIOS EM PROL DO CANDIDATO DO PSDB
UM BANHO DE CONFIABILIDADE E SEM TENDENCIA
PARTIDÁRIA O IDEAL DE TODOS OS MEIOS COMUNICAÇÕES
QUE INFELIZMENTE NO BRASIL AINDA DEIXA BASTANTE A DESEJAR
REDE RECORD WAS A BRAZILIAN TV AS HIGHLIGHTED IN
2014 ELECTIONS IN BRAZIL FOR FAIRNESS IN THE NEWS
terça-feira, 28 de outubro de 2014
segunda-feira, 27 de outubro de 2014
domingo, 26 de outubro de 2014
Brazil's left-leaning President Dilma Rousseff
was re-elected Sunday in the tightest race the nation
has seen since its return to democracy three decades
ago, after a bitter campaign that divided Brazilians
like no other before it.
With 99 percent of the vote counted, Rousseff had
51.5 percent of the ballots, topping center-right
challenger Aecio Neves with 48.5 percent.
Rousseff's victory extends the rule of the Workers'
Party, which has held the presidency since 2003.
During that time, they've enacted expansive social
programs that have helped pull millions of Brazilians
out of poverty and into the middle class
The choice between Rousseff and Neves split
Brazilians into two camps — those who thought only
the president would continue to protect the poor and
advance social inclusion versus those who were
certain that only the contender's market-friendly
economic policies could see Brazil return to solid growth.
The Workers' Party's time in power has seen a profound transformation in Brazil. But four straight years of weak
economic growth under Rousseff, with an economy
that's now in a technical recession, has some worried
those gains are under threat.
"Brazilians want it all. They are worried about the
economy being sluggish and stagnant but they want
to preserve social gains that have been made," said
Michael Shifter, president of the Washington-based
Inter-American Dialogue. "The question is which
candidate is best equipped to deliver both of those."
Rousseff and Neves have fought bitterly to convince
voters that they can deliver on both growth and social
advances. This year's campaign is widely considered
the most acrimonious since Brazil's return to democracy
in 1985, a battle between the only two parties to have
held the presidency since 1995.
Neves has hammered at Rousseff over a widening
kickback scandal at state-run oil company Petrobras,
with an informant telling investigators that the Workers'
Party directly benefited from the scheme.
Rousseff rejected those allegations and told Brazilians
that a vote for Neves would be support for returning
Brazil to times of intense economic turbulence,
hyperinflation and high unemployment, which the nation encountered when the Social Democrats last held power.
"We've worked so hard to better the lives of the people, and we won't let anything in this world, not even in this crisis nor all the pessimism, take away what they've conquered," Rousseff said before voting in southern Brazil.
In Rio de Janeiro, 43-year-old lifeguard Marcelo Barbosa dos Santos voted in the Botafogo neighborhood and said he's been a Rousseff backer from the beginning.
"Many things changed for the better during Dilma's
administration," he said. "The poor have seen our
lives improved and we want that to continue."
But Paula Canongia, a 34-year-old hotel owner, said
she voted for Neves because of "the current state of
our country."
"He's not an ideal candidate, far from it ... but we
desperately need change and hopefully he can
provide that," she said.
Officials from Brazil's top electoral court said voting
went smoothly through late afternoon. However,
there was a shooting at a polling location in the
northeastern state of Rio Grande do Norte, when
a man was shot and killed inside a school where
ballots were cast. Police said it appeared to be gang-related.
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