Brazilian Social Democratic Party With incumbent President
Fernando Henrique Cardoso ineligible to run for a third consecutive term due to term limits, the dominant centre-right PSDB was forced to find a new candidate for the 2002 election. Given that Cardoso was elected with the help of a broad centre-right coalition, there existed fear among PSDB officials that another candidate would be unable to maintain his coalition.
José Serra, who had served as
Minister of Health under Cardoso, was eventually chosen as the party's nominee. Outgoing President Cardoso was initially favorable to the prospect of
Governor of
Ceará Tasso Jereissati serving as the PSDB's presidential nominee in 2002. According to a report by
The Economist, Jereissati enjoyed broader support among the PSDB's coalition partners than Serra, whose performance on the campaign trail was considered lackluster. Additionally, some PSDB insiders and political scientists feared that Serra would perform poorly in the
northeast, and believed that Jereissati would do better in the region owing to being from
Ceará. In addition to Serra and Jereissati, who were the subject of most speculation, other potential PSDB candidates were speculated on, including members of the Cardoso administration. Economist and education official
Paulo Renato Souza, who served as Cardoso's
Minister of Education, was occasionally mentioned as a potential PSDB candidate, though he declined to run.
Pedro Malan, an economist who served as
Minister of Finance under Cardoso, was also the subject of some 2002 speculation, though he similarly chose not to contest the election for the PSDB. Both
Governor of São Paulo Geraldo Alckmin and
President of the Chamber of Deputies Aécio Neves were also the subject of some media speculation, though neither entered the race; Alckmin would later represent the PSDB in the
2006 and
2018 presidential elections, while Neves would be the party's presidential candidate in
2014.
Workers' Party Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, known as Lula, was a fixture of the Brazilian Left going into the 2002 election. Well-known for his role in the 1980 steelworkers' strike, the former labor leader and
federal deputy for
São Paulo served as the PT's presidential candidate in
1989,
1994, and
1998. Nevertheless, Lula faced some opposition within his own party, who felt that he shouldn't lead the party after losing the past three presidential elections.
Senator Eduardo Suplicy of
São Paulo contested the nomination for as the candidacy of the PT. Suplicy was well-known for being an early supporter of a
universal basic income, and party leadership encouraged his participation in the party's
preliminary election to mobilize and unite the party's base. Suplicy would lose to Lula with just over 15% of the preliminary vote. During the campaign, Suplicy accused party leadership of favoring Lula, publicly demanding that pro-Lula party president
José Dirceu be impartial in the election. Former
Governor of the Federal District Cristovam Buarque was named as a possible centrist challenger to Lula in the PT preliminary election. Buarque, who had supported
Democratic Labour Party (PDT) candidate
Leonel Brizola rather than Lula in the
1989 presidential election, was known for his independence from party leadership. A member of the party's
moderate wing, he was an early supporter of PT moving to the
political centre, advocating for privatization of some state industries. Buarque ended up not running for President, and would join Lula's administration as
Minister of Education in 2003, before leaving the party altogether and running for president in the 2006 election under the PDT. On the other hand, some members of the party's left-wing who felt Lula that was too moderate urged
Mayor of Belém Edmilson Rodrigues to contest the party' nomination. Edmilson did not end up running for the party's nomination, and would later leave the party to join the left-wing
Socialism and Liberty Party (PSOL).
Results Lula won all states handily. His best performance was in Ceará, with 95.4% of the popular vote, while his worst was in São Paulo (where Suplicy represented in the Senate), earning 76.5% of the popular vote there. Lula generally recorded his best results in the
Northeast and
North regions, while Suplicy tended to overperform in the
South,
Southeast and
Central West regions. The primary election had higher-than-expected turnout, with around 170 thousand party members voting. Turnout percentage exceeded 15%, the quorum for which the election results are validated. == Presidential candidates ==