The Workers’ Party in Brazil named jailed former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva on Saturday as its nominee for the country’s top job in October’s election.
Delegates of the left-leaning party confirmed da Silva, who served two terms as Brazil’s president between 2003 and 2010, with enthusiastic approval at a convention in Sao Paulo.
The former president is likely to be barred by Brazil’s electoral court, though.
Since April, the former president has been jailed on a corruption conviction, but he denies any wrongdoing and claims he is being politically persecuted.
Da Silva leads polls for the office by a large margin, and surveys show voters would lend their support to another Workers’ Party candidate if he cannot participate.
The party is not expected to name his running mate until Monday.
In a recorded message to the convention, da Silva said “it is those that sentenced me that are jailed in a lie.”
“Brazil needs to restore its democracy, find itself and be happy again,” he said. “They might lock me up, shut me up, but I will keep my faith in the Brazilian people.”
Other candidates
Meanwhile, other candidates criticized da Silva and his party.
“It pains my heart, but I don’t expect anything from them now,” said left-leaning presidential hopeful Ciro Gomes, of the Democratic Labor Party.
Conservative Geraldo Alckmin, who was named by the Social Democracy Party as its presidential nominee Saturday, cast blame for the country’s 13 million unemployed.
“It was the lies and the radicalism that created the chain of events that is the tragic heritage of the Workers’ Party,” he said.
Workers’ Party chairwoman Gleisi Hoffmann, who is trying to lure other left-leaning parties to the ticket, addressed supporters at the convention after two fringe parties endorsed da Silva’s run.
“They tried to exclude Lula from the political discussion,” she said. “There is no political discussion in Brazil without Lula and the Workers’ Party.”
Centrist Marina Silva was also nominated by the Rede party on Saturday.
Polling third, Silva will bid for the presidency for a third time. But this time her campaign isn’t nearly as structured as in previous opportunities.
“We are here maybe in a much harder situation, but we trust that this time our position will beat the establishment,” she said at the convention of her Rede party.