Brazil Election Update: Caiado In, Leite Out, And The Center Has Vanished
- Goiás Governor Ronaldo Caiado was confirmed Monday as PSD's presidential candidate for October 2026, chosen by party boss Gilberto Kassab over Eduardo Leite after Ratinho Júnior withdrew from the internal contest last week
- Caiado pledged that his first presidential act would be "broad, general, and unrestricted amnesty" for imprisoned ex-President Jair Bolsonaro - a statement that positions him firmly on the right despite the party's centrist branding
- Eduardo Leite publicly broke with the decision, saying it "disenchants" him and "so many other Brazilians" - while analysts suggest Caiado, polling at just 3.6%, may ultimately drop out and endorse Flávio Bolsonaro's candidacy
The Brazil 2026 election field crystallized further on Monday as the PSD confirmed Goiás Governor Ronaldo Caiado as its presidential candidate, deepening the fractures within a Brazilian right that remains divided over whether to rally behind Flávio Bolsonaro or pursue independent paths. The Rio Times, the Latin American financial news outlet, reports that party president Gilberto Kassab made the announcement at PSD headquarters in São Paulo, calling Caiado "the best name" after an internal selection that eliminated Paraná Governor Ratinho Júnior (who withdrew March 23) and passed over Rio Grande do Sul Governor Eduardo Leite.
Caiado, 76, must resign the governorship by April 4 to comply with electoral desincompatibilização rules. He is expected to formally step down Tuesday at the Goiás State Legislature, handing power to Vice Governor Daniel Vilela (MDB).
Bolsonaro Amnesty as Day OneIn his acceptance speech, Caiado made a promise that strips away any pretense of centrism: his first act as president would be "broad, general, and unrestricted amnesty" for Jair Bolsonaro, who was convicted and imprisoned for plotting to overturn the 2022 election. The pledge places Caiado squarely in the Bolsonarista orbit despite PSD's long-standing effort to position itself as a pragmatic center party.
Columnist Eliane Cantanhêde of O Estado de S. Paulo argued that Caiado 's candidacy confirms the right "has taken off its centrist costume," and predicted he will eventually drop out and endorse Flávio Bolsonaro - "perhaps with some relief, since he can stop pretending to be what he isn't."
Leite Breaks, the Center VanishesEduardo Leite, who had positioned himself as the PSD's genuine centrist alternative, responded on social media within hours: "Although this decision disenchants me, as it does so many other Brazilians, by the way they insist on doing politics in our country, I will not contest it. But that does not mean an absence of conviction." He confirmed he will remain as governor of Rio Grande do Sul through the end of his second term.
Leite's exit from the presidential race eliminates the last credible centrist candidacy from the field. The Brazil 2026 election is now a contest between Lula on the left, Flávio Bolsonaro on the right, and a crowded lane of right-of-center candidates - Caiado, Renan Santos of Partido Missão (who calls himself "Brazil's Milei"), and others - who may ultimately consolidate behind Bolsonaro's son.
The Numbers ProblemCaiado enters the race with a fundamental challenge: he polls at just 3.6% nationally according to the latest Paraná Pesquisas survey (March 25–28). He ran for president once before, in 1989, and finished tenth with 0.72% of the vote. Kassab argued at a Banco Safra event Monday morning that the strategy is to reach the runoff, where "he would win" - but the path from 3.6% to the top two is steep, particularly against Lula and Flávio Bolsonaro, who together command roughly 80% of first-round voting intention.
For investors and observers tracking the race, Monday's announcement clarifies one thing: Brazil's political center is empty. The right is fractured but expanding, the left is consolidated around Lula, and the eventual shape of the contest will depend on whether figures like Caiado and Renan Santos serve as genuine alternatives or simply as placeholders until the right coalesces - as it has in every major Latin American election of the past two years.
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