Brazil’s leftist presidential candidate Fernando Haddad has narrowed the lead of his rightwing rival Jair Bolsonaro ahead of Sunday’s election runoff, according to two polls published on the eve of the election.

Haddad narrowed Bolsonaro’s lead to eight percentage points in an Ibope poll released late on Saturday, a survey that gave him 46% compared with Bolsonaro’s 54%.

As only two candidates remain and those figures discard voters who say they will annul their votes, that in practice means Haddad needs to win five percentage points to overtake the rightwing former army officer.

Polling stations opened at 8am (11am GMT) on Sunday and the last will close in far western Brazil at 7pm Brasilia time (10pm GMT).

In a Datafolha poll also released late on Saturday, Bolsonaro had 55% of voter backing, compared with 45% for Haddad.

However, Haddad’s prospects of overhauling Bolsonaro were dented when he failed to win the crucial endorsement of former center-left candidate Ciro Gomes on Saturday.

Gomes, a former governor of the north-east Ceará state, is influential in Brazil’s poorest region. His endorsement could have given Haddad’s Workers party (PT) a big lift in the South American country’s most polarised election in a generation.

Gomes finished third in the first-round vote on 7 October with 12% of the vote, behind Bolsonaro’s 46% and Haddad’s 29%. Gomes had hoped to be the standard bearer of the left but was outmaneuvered by the Workers party jailed former leader, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, who anointed Haddad as his stand-in.

There was consolation for Haddad when Rodrigo Janot, Brazil’s influential former prosecutor general under whose watch the country’s unprecedented investigations and prosecutions of endemic political graft took place, tweeted late on Saturday that he would vote for Haddad. That was a blow to Bolsonaro’s work positioning himself as the only anti-corruption candidate.

“I think we are at the brink of a process that could push our democracy beyond its limits,” Janot told Reuters late Saturday. “Freedom, equality and fraternity – always and at any cost.”



Haddad also won the backing of Brazil’s most popular YouTube host, Felipe Neto, who has 27.7 million followers on his channel. A popular anti-corruption judge, Joaquim Barbosa, who jailed several top PT leaders for corruption, also came out for Haddad.



Bolsonaro, a former army captain, is poised to become Brazil’s first far-right president since the end of the 1964-1985 military dictatorship. The 63-year-old seven-term congressman has promised to crack down on crime and corruption, pitching himself as the anti-establishment candidate for voters fed up with political graft and violent crime.

Bolsonaro’s sudden rise comes as Brazil finds itself in its worst recession and embroiled in its biggest corruption scandal after the leftist PT ran the government for 13 of the last 15 years.

Until his presidential run, Bolsonaro was best known for defending the former military regime and its use of torture. He has faced charges for misogynist, racist and homophobic rants. The supreme court rejected the racism charge, but has not ruled on a charge of inciting to rape in a case in which he told a fellow lawmaker she was not pretty enough to rape. He called the case political persecution.



