Brazil's scandal-plagued former leftist president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and a tough- talking rightwing congressman lead voter intentions ahead of next year's presidential elections, a poll has said.
Underlining the turmoil in Brazilian politics, the poll also confirmed plummeting support for the current center-right government, with 75.6 per cent saying it is doing a bad job. Only 3.4 per cent said the government is doing a good job, down from 10.3 per cent in February.
More than 84 per cent of those polled disapprove of President Michel Temer's performance, while just 10.1 per cent approve, the poll from the MDA research institute said.
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General elections are due in October 2018 and Temer, who took over last year after Dilma Rousseff was removed in an impeachment trial, is not expected to seek a new term.
With voters in an angry, anti-establishment mood, the poll commissioned by the National Transport Confederation showed high rejection rates for all probable candidates.
Lula was hugely popular during his 2003-2010 two-term presidency but his reputation has been damaged by steep economic decline under his handpicked successor Rousseff and a mammoth corruption scandal.
Investigators have revealed that swaths of political parties and politicians -- allegedly including Temer, Lula and many others at the top -- took bribes from big Brazilian companies for years in exchange for contracts.
Lula has been sentenced to more than nine years in prison after being convicted of bribe taking, but he remains free on appeal. He also faces five more corruption trials, any one of which could result in him being imprisoned or barred from seeking election.
And late yesterday, a federal judge filed yet another corruption case against him, the seventh currently open. It is a case claiming he took money linked to the auto industry.
His attorney denied any blame, and claimed it was yet more "political persecution."
The poll released earlier found Lula would easily win a first election round against all comers, with around 32 per cent of the vote, compared to just under 20 per cent for his nearest rival, the rightwing firebrand Jair Bolsonaro.
Ecologist Marina Silva, who got 21 per cent in the first round of the 2014 elections, would now get 11 to 12 per cent in scenarios with Lula and Bolsonaro.
In a runoff second round, Lula would also win, the poll found, hitting more than 40 percent of the vote in most scenarios, compared to between 15 and 29 per cent for potential runnersup.
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