Christianity Today
 
 
Brazil's Evangelicals Make Voting Bloc  Debut
Forced presidential runoff demonstrates the  importance of Protestant 
voters.
 
Marcos Simas | posted  11/02/2010 10:21AM




On Sunday, Brazilians elected their first woman president in what  many 
commentators labeled a mandate to continue the popular policies of outgoing  
president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. 
In her first speech as president-elect, Dilma Rousseff thanked  many people 
but did not thank God—something many voters had expected her to do  amid a 
campaign drenched in outreach to evangelical voters. Dispute over  
Rousseff's support for same-sex marriage and abortion led both her and defeated 
 
candidate Jose Serra to turn to pastor-advisors and Christian outreach  
committees to gain evangelical sympathy. 
But what drew the most attention about evangelical voters came in  an 
earlier round of voting, as nearly 20 million Brazilians cast votes for  Marina 
Silva, a former environment minister and committed Assemblies of God  member 
from a small party with little money. With more than 19 percent of the  
vote, Silva forced an unexpected runoff between Rousseff and Serra.  
The largest private research institute in Brazil, IBOPE, noted  that 
Rousseff lost many votes in the final weeks of the first round because her  
positions on abortion and homosexuality generated insecurity and 
dissatisfaction  
among evangelicals and Catholics, two large groups that are often at odds in 
the  country but rally together on these two themes in political seasons. 
However, two leading sociologists of Brazilian Christianity, Paul  Freston 
and Alexandre Brasil Fonseca, argued that there is not as much such  
cohesion and unity among evangelical voters as some observers presumed.  
Evangelical voters were also split between Rousseff and Serra. This is  
especially 
true of neo-Pentecostals, whose 10 million members often belong to  large 
churches with strong media clout. 
The power struggle between two of Brazil’s high-profile pastors  was 
clearly on display. Bishop Edir Macedo, leader of the Universal Church of  the 
Kingdom of God, which claims 13 million members, supported Rousseff. Macedo  
openly clashed with television personality Silas Malafaia, a Serra supporter 
who  is the former vice president of the 15-million-member Assemblies of God. 
Another group of Christian leaders concerned with shaping public  opinion 
during the election produced a document calling for ethics and Christian  
witness to the gospel. Signers include the former president of the now-defunct  
Brazilian Evangelical Association, Ariovaldo Ramos, a Baptist and moderate  
conservative. 
In Brazil, the term evangelical generally describes  Protestants who 
believe in the Bible as the Word of God and have accepted Jesus  as personal 
Savior, but do not necessarily hold to other traditional Protestant  doctrines 
and thus offer limited comparison to evangelicals in the United  States. But 
at an estimated size of 40 million among Brazil's 200-million  population, 
they are becoming an increasing political force (if not voting bloc)  in the 
nation. After October's parliamentary election, 68 federal deputies and  
three senators are evangelicals. While that is only 13 percent of Brazil's  
National Congress, it is nearly double the 7 percent of evangelical  
representation before the election.

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