SAO PAULO: A Brazilian presidential candidate on Thursday accused his far-right adversary of illegal campaign practices for allegedly allowing friendly businessmen to secretly pay to spread slanderous messages.
The accusations by left-leaning Fernando Haddad follow a report published by the newspaper Folha de S.Paulo saying businessmen linked to Congressman Jair Bolsonaro allegedly bankrolled the spread of fake news on the WhatsApp messaging service to benefit his candidacy. The article said a blast message campaign was planned for the week before the Oct. 28 runoff.
In a series of tweets, Bolsonaro, who is the front-runner in opinion polls, said any support of businessmen was voluntary. Gustavo Bebbiano, the chairman of Bolsonaroâs Social Liberal Party, denied receiving illegal donations.
âEvery donation made until this day, no matter if it is our party or our candidateâs campaign, comes from resources donated to our platform, accordingly with legislation,â Bebbiano said
Haddad, who was hand-picked by jailed former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, said he has leads for the federal police to follow, but did not reveal names. He later asked Brazilâs top court to start an investigation, and he said he might take the case to the Organization of American States.
âThere has been a criminal organization of businessmen which used illegal campaign financing to promote this candidacy and tamper with the election in the first round (on Oct. 7). And they want to do it again in the runoff,â Haddad said. âWe estimate that hundreds of thousands of messages, all fake, were sent to voters to suggest they voted for my rival.â
Paying for the blast-messaging, if true, could be a violation of Brazilâs campaign finance laws since companies are barred from giving money to candidates, electoral lawyer Erick Pereira said.
âBut there is still need for robust evidence, which is not here at this moment,â Pereira added.
The Folha article mentioned businessman Luciano Hang, who owns the Havan department store, as one of the contributors. It also mentioned a handful of marketing companies that allegedly received money to do the blast messaging.
In an emailed statement, the Havan chain said the newspaper âpublished fake news with a clear ideological slant,â adding it would sue over the article.
At Yacows, an Internet marketing service mentioned in the article, a person answered the phone and said there would be no comment because the company did not engage in spreading messages.
The other companies mentioned in the article didnât answer their phones Thursday afternoon.
In his tweet, Bolsonaro said Haddadâs campaign was trying to change the subject.
âThe Workersâ Party is not being affected by fake news, it is affected by the truth,â Bolsonaro wrote. âThey stole the populationâs money, were arrested, confronted the judiciary, disrespected families and made the country sink into violence and chaos.â
On Thursday, a Datafolha poll said Bolsonaro keeps a comfortable advantage over Haddad, with 59 percent support against his adversaryâs 41 percent. The polling firm said it interviewed 9,137 voters Wednesday and Thursday and the poll had a margin of error of two percentage points.
Brazil front-runner accused of illegal campaign practices
Updated 19 October 2018
Brazil front-runner accused of illegal campaign practices

- Businessmen linked to Bolsonaro allegedly bankrolled the spread of fake news on the WhatsApp messaging service to benefit his candidacy
- Bolsonaro said any support of businessmen was voluntary