Ceará native has no favorite for Governor or Senate.
An Ibope poll indicates that 69% of voters are undecided regarding the succession in the Ceará state government; for the Senate seat, the uncertainty is even greater: 77% of those surveyed did not know or preferred not to answer, and another 17% stated that they would vote blank or null; former governor Tasso Jereissati, governor Cid Gomes, and senator Eunício Oliveira will have a lot of work ahead of them.
247 The race is on for next year's elections in Ceará, as shown in a text by blogger Edvaldo Araújo based on an Ibope poll released this Wednesday. Read:
IBOPE confirms: voters in Ceará have no favorite candidate for either Governor or Senate.
The poll released this afternoon by IBOPE demonstrates what was already evident on the streets: whoever wants to win this election will have a lot of work ahead of them. In the spontaneous question, the 69% undecided rate stands out. Adding to this is the fact that none of the names mentioned manage to get above 1%, which signifies a complete lack of political leadership in the state. For the Senate seat, this uncertainty is even greater: 77% of those surveyed did not know or preferred not to answer, and another 17% stated that they would vote blank or null.
Even the approval ratings achieved by Tasso Jereissati in the prompted survey (which range between 45% and 51%) cannot, at this moment, be viewed with euphoria. This is because the former senator and governor seems to still be feeding off the image he built throughout his public life with three terms as governor and one as senator. Only 4% stated that they did not know him well enough to comment on a possible candidacy of the PSDB candidate. For Eunício, the rate of unfamiliarity reaches 24%. The rest fall in the 60% to 66% range.
On the other hand, the research also demonstrates a degree of leadership from former president Lula, president Dilma, and governor Cid Gomes.
Therefore, according to IBOPE, much water will still flow under this bridge. The rest is to observe the political situation, which is not at all good for Brazilian politicians, and remember that in June of next year we will have the World Cup, and that the euphoria of the demonstrations and the victory or defeat of the national team could create an even greater climate of pessimism. Not to mention the economy until then.