2016 São Paulo mayoral election

The 2016 São Paulo municipal election took place in the city of São Paulo on the 2 October 2016.[2] Voters voted to elect the Mayor, the Vice Mayor and 55 City Councillors for the administration of the city. The result was a 1st round victory for João Doria of the Brazilian Social Democratic Party (PSDB), winning 3,085,187 votes and a share of 53,28% of the popular vote, defeating incumbent mayor Fernando Haddad of the Workers' Party (PT), who took 967,190 votes and a share of 16,70% of the popular vote. Although Haddad came in second place on the popular vote, he did not win any electoral zone, while Marta Suplicy (PMDB), who came in fourth place, managed to win a plurality of the votes in 2 electoral zones.

2016 São Paulo municipal election

← 2012 October 2, 2016 (2016-10-02) 2020 →
Mayoral election
Opinion polls
Turnout78.16%[1]
 
Candidate João Doria Fernando Haddad
Party PSDB PT
Alliance Speed Up SP More São Paulo
Running mate Bruno Covas Gabriel Chalita
Popular vote 3,085,187[1] 967,190[1]
Percentage 53.28%[1] 16.70%[1]

Most voted candidate per electoral zone:
Doria:      30-39%      40-49%      50-59%      60-69%      70-79%
Marta:      30-39%

Mayor before election

Fernando Haddad
PT

Elected mayor

João Doria
PSDB

Parliamentary election
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
Municipal Chamber
PSDB Aurélio Nomura 19.23% 11 +2
PT Senival Moura 15.90% 9 −2
Republicanos Souza Santos 7.88% 4 +2
DEM Sandra Tadeu 5.21% 4 +2
MDB Nelo Rodolfo 4.74% 2 −2
PSD José Police Neto 4.56% 4 −3
PV Abou Anni 4.37% 2 −2
PTB Paulo Frange 4.10% 2 −2
PSOL Toninho Vespoli 3.44% 2 +1
PR Toninho Paiva 3.02% 4 +1
PTN None 2.74% 1 +1
PCdoB None 1.56% 0 −1
PSC None 1.09% 1 +1
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.

Background

edit

The campaign happened in the context of the ongoing political crisis and the fallout after the recently impeached president Dilma Rousseff, of the Workers' Party (PT).[3] This event played a huge role in the election, which would see a weakened Worker's Party (PT). The election saw the resurgence of the Brazilian Social Democratic Party (PSDB) with Doria emerging as their leading candidate in opposition to the Worker's Party, which was suffering a steady decline following Dilma's impeachment.

Incumbent mayor Fernando Haddad ran a reelection campaign on keeping the left-wing status-quo, in contrast to Doria's campaign, which emphasized mostly socially liberal economic reforms, as part of the "liberal wave" following the fallout of Dilma's impeachment. Among other candidates were Celso Russomano (PRB), Marta Suplicy (PMDB), Altino Prazeres (PSTU), Ricardo Young (REDE), João Bico (PSDC), Levy Fidelix (PRTB), Luiza Erundina (PSOL) and Major Olímpio (SD).

Candidates

edit
Party Candidate Most relevant political office or occupation Party Running mate Coalition Electoral number

Brazilian Republican Party (PRB)

 
Celso Russomanno
Member of the Chamber of Deputies
(since 2015)
 

Brazilian Labour Party (PTB)

 
Marlene Campos Machado
São Paulo Knows, We Solve It 10
 

Workers' Party (PT)

 
Fernando Haddad
Mayor of São Paulo
(2013–2017)
 

Democratic Labour Party (PDT)

 
Gabriel Chalita
More São Paulo 13
 

Brazilian Democratic Movement Party (PMDB)

 
Marta Suplicy
Senator for São Paulo
(2011–2019)
 

Social Democratic Party (PSD)

 
Andrea Matarazzo
Union for São Paulo 15
 

United Socialist Workers' Party (PSTU)

 
Altino Prazes
Former president of São Paulo Metro Workers' Union  

United Socialist Workers' Party (PSTU)

 
Janaína Rodrigues
16
 

Sustainability Network (REDE)

 
Ricardo Young
Member of the Municipal Chamber of São Paulo
(2013–2017)
 

Sustainability Network (REDE)

 
Carlota Mingolla
18
 

Christian Social Democratic Party (PSDC)

 
João Bico
Vice President of the Trade Association of São Paulo  

Christian Social Democratic Party (PSDC)

 
Sílvia Cristina
27
Brazilian Labour Renewal Party (PRTB)  
Levy Fidelix
PRTB National President
(1994–2021)
Brazilian Labour Renewal Party (PRTB)  
Jairo Glikson
28
 

Brazilian Social Democracy Party (PSDB)

 
João Doria
Businessman and TV presenter  

Brazilian Social Democracy Party (PSDB)

 
Bruno Covas
Speed Up SP 45
 

Socialism and Liberty Party (PSOL)

 
Luiza Erundina
Member of the Chamber of Deputies
(since 1999)
 

Socialism and Liberty Party (PSOL)

 
Ivan Valente
Dreams Can Govern 50
 

Solidariedade

 
Sérgio Olímpio
Member of the Chamber of Deputies
(2015–2019)
 

Solidariedade

 
David Martins
77

Debates

edit
2020 São Paulo mayoral election debates
 No. Date Host and Location Moderator Participants
Key:
 P  Present  A  Absent  N  Not invited
PSDB PRB PT SD PSOL
Doria Russomanno Haddad Olímpio Erundina
1 Monday, 22 August 2016 Band TV
São Paulo, Morumbi
Boris Casoy P P P P N
2 Friday, 2 September 2016 RedeTV!, Veja, UOL, Facebook
Osasco, Ayrosa
Amanda Klein, Mariana Godoy P P P P P
3 Sunday, 18 September 2016 TV Gazeta, O Estado de S. Paulo, Twitter
São Paulo, Bela Vista
Maria Lydia Flândoli P P P P P
4 Friday, 23 September 2016 SBT, UOL, Folha de S. Paulo
Osasco, Industrial Anhanguera
Carlos Nascimento P P P P P
5 Sunday, 25 September 2016 RecordTV, Google
São Paulo, Barra Funda
Adriana Araújo P P P P P
6 Thursday, 29 September 2016 TV Globo
São Paulo, Itaim Bibi
César Tralli P P P P P

Opinion polls

edit
Polling aggregates
Active candidates
  João Doria (PSDB)
  Fernando Haddad (PT)
  Celso Russomanno (PRB)
  Marta Suplicy (PMDB)
  Others
  Abstentions/Undecided
Pollster/client(s) Date(s)
conducted
Sample
size
Russomanno
PRB
Suplicy
PMDB
Chalita
PMDB
Haddad
PT
Erundina
PSOL
Giannazi
PSOL
Doria
PSDB
Serra
PSDB
Matarazzo
PSD/PSDB
Others Abst.
Undec.
Lead
2016 election 2 Oct 13.64% 10.14% 16.70% 3.16% 53.29% 3.04% 21.84% 36.59%
Ibope 29 Sep–1 Oct 1,204 20% 16% 13% 5% 30% 3% 13% 10%
Datafolha 30 Sep–1 Oct 4,022 14% 12% 14% 5% 38% 3% 14% 24%
Ibope 25–28 Sep 1,204 22% 16% 13% 5% 28% 4% 12% 6%
Datafolha 26 Sep 1,260 22% 15% 11% 5% 30% 2% 16% 8%
Ibope 20–26 Sep 1,204 24% 15% 12% 4% 28% 3% 14% 4%
Datafolha 21 Sep 1,260 22% 20% 10% 4% 25% 3% 15% 3%
Paraná Pesquisas 16–20 Sep 1,200 27.7% 19.5% 8.5% 4.9% 21.2% 3.3% 15% 6.5%
Ibope 10–13 Sep 1,001 30% 20% 9% 5% 17% 3% 16% 10%
Datafolha 8 Sep 1,092 26% 21% 9% 7% 16% 4% 17% 5%
Paraná Pesquisas 28 Aug–1 Sep 1,200 32.1% 15.8% 7.0% 7.1% 13.7% 4.7% 19.5% 16.1%
Datafolha 23–24 Aug 1,092 31% 16% 8% 10% 5% 5% 24% 15%
Ibope 19–22 Aug 805 33% 17% 9% 9% 9% 6% 17% 16%
Ibope 22–27 Jul 602 29% 10% 7% 8% 7% 17% 18% 19%
Datafolha 12–13 Jul 1,092 25% 16% 8% 10% 6% 13% 23% 9%
21% 11% 13% 7% 19% 30% 8%
Datafolha 16–19 Jun 602 26% 10% 7% 8% 6% 18% 26% 16%
Datafolha 28–29 Oct 2015 1,092 34% 13% 12% 3% 17% 20% 11%
34% 13% 12% 4% 17% 20% 11%
2012 election 7 Oct 21.6% 13.6% 28.98% 1.02% 30.75% 4.04% 12.78% 1.77%

Results

edit

Mayor

edit
CandidateRunning matePartyVotes%
João DoriaBruno CovasPSDB3,085,18753.29
Fernando Haddad (incumbent)Gabriel Chalita (PDT)PT967,19016.70
Celso RussomannoMarlene Campos Machado (PTB)PRB789,98613.64
Marta SuplicyAndrea Matarazzo (PSD)PMDB587,22010.14
Luiza ErundinaIvan ValentePSOL184,0003.18
Sérgio OlímpioDavid MartinsSD116,8702.02
Ricardo YoungCarlota MingolaREDE25,9930.45
Levy FidelixJairo GliksonPRTB21,7050.37
João BicoSílvia CristinaPSDC6,0060.10
Altino PrazeresJanaina RodriguesPSTU4,7150.08
Henrique ÁreasTranquillo MoterlePCO1,0190.02
Total5,789,891100.00
Valid votes5,789,89192.85
Invalid votes78,3791.26
Blank votes367,4715.89
Total votes6,235,741100.00
Registered voters/turnout8,886,19570.17
Source: G1
Popular vote
Doria
53.29%
Haddad
16.70%
Russomanno
13.64%
Marta
10.14%
Erundina
3.18%
Olímpio
2.02%
Others
1.02%

Municipal Chamber

edit
 
PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Brazilian Social Democracy Party1,032,16019.2311 2
Workers' Party853,80815.919 2
Brazilian Republican Party423,1077.884 2
Democrats279,8345.214 2
Brazilian Democratic Movement Party254,6694.742 2
Social Democratic Party244,5764.564 3
Green Party234,6604.372 2
Brazilian Labour Party219,9724.102 2
Socialism and Liberty Party184,4613.442 1
Brazilian Socialist Party169,8913.173 
Party of the Republic162,3353.024 1
Humanist Party of Solidarity152,0462.831 
National Labour Party147,1232.741 1
New Party140,7942.621New
Progressive Party130,0992.421 
Democratic Labour Party128,9872.400 
Popular Socialist Party99,7581.862 
Communist Party of Brazil83,4891.560 1
Social Liberal Party64,1181.190 
Social Christian Party58,4001.091 1
Solidariedade55,0041.020 
Sustainability Network47,3020.880New
Republican Party of the Social Order39,4610.741New
Christian Social Democratic Party32,3470.600 
Progressive Republican Party30,8690.580 
National Ecologic Party24,1800.450 
Brazilian Labour Renewal Party21,2450.400 
Christian Labour Party17,8770.330 
Free Fatherland Party14,1140.260 
United Socialist Workers' Party6,5050.120 
Labour Party of Brazil5,0280.090 
Brazilian Woman's Party5,8640.110New
Brazilian Communist Party2,4890.050 
Workers' Cause Party8270.020 
Total5,367,399100.0055
Valid votes5,367,39977.29
Invalid votes908,45913.08
Blank votes668,6749.63
Total votes6,944,532100.00
Registered voters/turnout8,886,19578.15
Source: UOL

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d e "Eleições 2016 São Paulo/SP: Aprovação, resultado, prefeito e vereadores eleitos" (in Portuguese). Uol. 2 October 2016. Retrieved 1 December 2017.
  2. ^ Prazeres, Leandro (9 July 2015). "Câmara aprova novas regras para eleições; veja o que pode mudar" (in Portuguese). Uol. Retrieved 2 December 2017.
  3. ^ Watts, Jonathan; Bowater, Donna (1 September 2016). "Brazil's Dilma Rousseff impeached by Senate in crushing defeat". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 December 2017.