Brazilian President Lula at podium with Datafolha poll graph showing declining approval ratings ahead of 2026 elections.
Brazilian President Lula at podium with Datafolha poll graph showing declining approval ratings ahead of 2026 elections.
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Datafolha poll shows drop in Lula government approval

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A Datafolha poll released on April 11, 2026, shows the negative evaluation of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's government steady at 40%, while positive ratings fell from 32% to 29%. Disapproval of Lula's performance rose to 51%, with approval at 45%. Conducted April 7-9, the survey signals a tight race ahead of the 2026 elections.

Datafolha surveyed 2,004 voters across 137 cities from Tuesday (April 7) to Thursday (9), with a two-percentage-point margin of error. Regular government ratings rose to 29% from 26% in March. Lula outperforms Jair Bolsonaro at a similar point, when the former president had 46% bad/very bad ratings.

Positive views exceed averages among the elderly (36%), less educated (43%), and Northeasterners (41%). Bad/very bad ratings are higher among the more educated (49%), Southerners (49%), evangelicals (52%), and those earning over 10 minimum wages (58%).

Lula allies downplay results, blaming fuel price hikes from the Iran war and family debt. PT president Edinho Silva said: "The poll reflects anti-system sentiment from corruption scandals, but Lula is sponsoring the investigations."

Opposition celebrates. Flávio Bolsonaro posted: "We will free Brazil." PP's Ciro Nogueira stated: "People do not want a Lula 4." In simulated second rounds, Lula ties Flávio (45% to 46%) and leads Ronaldo Caiado and Romeu Zema by slim margins.

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Discussions on X about the Datafolha poll focus on Lula's government approval dropping to 29% positive (from 32%) and steady 40% negative, with disapproval rising to 51%. Users highlight implications for 2026 elections, where Lula ties with Flávio Bolsonaro at 45-46% in second-round scenarios. Right-leaning accounts celebrate the decline and potential opposition gains, news outlets neutrally report rejection rates around 48% for Lula, left-leaning voices attribute drops to economic factors like gas prices, and some express skepticism about poll methodology.

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Illustration depicting public protests against Brazil's STF amid record distrust poll results from Datafolha.
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Datafolha records peak distrust in STF and Judiciary

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A Datafolha poll released on March 11, 2026, shows distrust in the Supreme Federal Court (STF) reaching 43%, the highest since 2012, while in the Judiciary it hit 36%, also a record. The survey, conducted from March 3 to 5 with 2,004 people in 137 municipalities, indicates worsening trust in seven out of eight institutions analyzed since December 2024. The public overwhelmingly rejects questionable ethical conduct by STF justices.

A Datafolha poll shows that 58% of Brazilians turn to television and 54% to social media for political and election information. Habits differ by 2022 vote: Lula voters favor tv, while Bolsonaro supporters prefer digital platforms. The survey, conducted in March 2026, highlights variations in information consumption between groups.

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A rally against President Lula and STF ministers took place on Avenida Paulista in São Paulo on Sunday (March 1, 2026), organized by Deputy Nikolas Ferreira (PL-MG). The event, attended by Flávio Bolsonaro and other opposition leaders, drew an estimated 20,000 participants and was dismissed by government allies as a failure. Inflammatory speeches targeted Alexandre de Moraes and Dias Toffoli amid electoral tensions.

President Lee Jae Myung's approval rating rose slightly to 61.9 percent last week, staying above 60 percent for the fifth straight week, a Realmeter survey showed Monday. Disapproval fell to 32.8 percent. Realmeter partly attributed the gain to a rebound in the local currency and stock market amid ceasefire expectations in the US war against Iran.

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Two former ministers from Bolsonaro's government, Gilson Machado and Marcelo Queiroga, posted a video on social media urging support for Flávio Bolsonaro in the 2026 elections. Electoral law experts view the action as premature campaign propaganda, which is illegal under Brazilian law. Congressman Lindbergh Farias has filed a complaint with the TSE against the post.

The Federal Police obtained authorization to break the banking, fiscal, and telematic secrecy of Fábio Luís Lula da Silva, son of President Lula, amid investigations into INSS frauds. The INSS CPI also approved the break in a tumultuous session on Thursday (26), generating tensions in the government ahead of the election campaign. Aides fear impacts on re-election, while the opposition seeks to extend the commission.

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Pastor Silas Malafaia announced he may not support Flávio Bolsonaro in the 2026 presidential election, criticizing the idea of uniting the right around a single candidate. He indicated a preference for stronger contenders like Tarcísio de Freitas and questioned the senator's charisma.

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