Under the 1967–1969 constitution enacted by the military, the electoral college was composed of all the members of the Brazilian bicameral
National Congress (formed by
Senators and
Federal Deputies) and also of a number of State Deputies who were especially elected by their peers in the State Assemblies for the purpose of serving as delegates of those Assemblies in the electoral college. The
1982 legislative elections had already taken place under the process of gradual restoration of democratic freedoms, and the opposition had a slim majority of seats in the Chamber of Deputies, but the governing party, allied with the Military Regime, still controlled the Senate (only a fraction of the composition of the Senate had been up for election in 1982, other senators had been elected indirectly in the late 1970s). Two groups were disputing the succession of President
João Figueiredo: the Democratic Alliance and the
Democratic Social Party. The Democratic Alliance, which advocated the restoration of democracy through the creation of a new
Constitution, launched the candidacy of
Tancredo Neves from the
Brazilian Democratic Movement (MDB). The MDB led the Alliance and was supported by the
Liberal Front Party, a dissidence of the Democratic Social Party, and the
Democratic Labour Party. The Democratic Social Party, on the other hand, defended the legacy of the
1964 military regime, and launched the candidature of
Paulo Salim Maluf, also a civilian, but one that was aligned with the military elite that controlled the regime. The supporters of the regime, however, were weakened: they had even rebranded their party as the Democratic Social Party, abandoning the old name ARENA (National Renewal Alliance) in order to confuse voters at legislative elections and thus avoid a massive loss of seats. Also, in the nomination of the PDS's presidential candidate, Colonel Mário Andreazza was the preferred candidate of outgoing President General João Figueiredo, but the membership of the PDS was no longer disciplined: former São Paulo Governor Paulo Maluf defeated Andreazza in the Party's Convention, resulting in a split in the PDS. After Maluf's nomination, many members left the Party and joined the Opposition MDB (including José Sarney, who went on to become Tancredo Neves's running mate in a political deal that secured for the Opposition the votes of the electoral college members who defected from the PDS and joined the MDB). In 1984, the Diretas Já movement, that sought the immediate restoration of direct popular elections for the Presidency of the Republic, failed, since, in spite of strong popular support and rallies, the Opposition to the military government failed to secure the two-thirds supermajority of votes in Congress, that was required to amend the 1967 Constitution, as amended and republished in 1969. ==Results==