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Brazil president faces angry citizens as elections loom

With elections looming, President Dilma Rousseff now faces Brazilians angry at their World Cup humiliation, but her bigger worry will be convincing voters she can jump-start the economy. AP PHOTO/ERALDO PERES

BRASILIA, Brazil-鈥擶ith elections looming, President Dilma Rousseff now faces Brazilians angry at their World Cup humiliation, but her bigger worry will be convincing voters she can jump-start the economy.

Rousseff had promised Brazilians that they would see the 鈥淐up of Cups鈥 but they ended up witnessing their beloved national team鈥檚 elimination in an embarrassing 7-1 semifinal defeat to Germany at home on Tuesday.

The shocking defeat has brought a gloomy mood to a country that often confirms the clich茅 that 鈥渇ootball is a religion.鈥

鈥淔ootball is very important for Brazil and a defeat of this magnitude will deeply affect the nation鈥檚 spirit,鈥 said Luiz Antonio Machado, a sociologist at Rio de Janeiro State University.

But analysts say Rousseff鈥檚 hopes of reelection in October will depend on how voters feel about their pocketbooks, not a football match.

The leftist president鈥檚 popularity has seen ups and downs in the past year, reaching lows when protests erupted last year over the record $11 billion spent to host the World Cup.

But she has a comfortable lead in opinion polls, with the most recent survey giving her 38-percent support compared with 20 percent for Social Democratic Sen. A茅cio Neves and 9 percent for socialist former Gov. Eduardo Campos.

Rousseff said she could never have fathomed such a bad Cup defeat.

鈥淢y nightmares never got so bad. They never went that far,鈥 she told CNN.

But she said she did not believe it would spark fresh protests because the tournament had taken place in peace.

Hallmark of a great country

鈥淏eing able to overcome defeat, I think, is the feature and hallmark of a major national team and of a great country,鈥 she said.

Rousseff鈥檚 popularity has risen in the past month thanks to the success of the tournament and the national team鈥檚 victories, but Tuesday鈥檚 devastating loss has ended the party mood in the street.

Many fans chanted obscenities against Rousseff at Mineirao Stadium in Belo Horizonte, though she was absent. She heard similar insults when she attended the opening game in S茫o Paulo on June 12.

More verbal abuse

She runs the risk of hearing more verbal abuse when she attends the final in Rio de Janeiro鈥檚 Maracana Stadium on Sunday to hand the trophy to the winner.

A protest has been called outside the stadium that day, but it鈥檚 unclear whether many people will turn out.

A few protests took place during the tournament, gathering just a few hundred people at most鈥攆ar fewer than the hundreds of thousands who flooded the streets during last year鈥檚 Confederations Cup, a World Cup dress rehearsal.

Brazilians have demanded better health care, education and public services in a country whose once blistering economic growth has slowed in recent years. Growth of just one percent is expected this year while inflation is on the rise.

The World Cup defeat 鈥渃an increase the criticism, change the mood,鈥 said Humberto Dantas, a political science professor at the Education and Research Institute.

But Dantas voiced doubts that Brazil would see another round of massive demonstrations because many protestors are students who are currently on vacation and other people were turned off by clashes between police and demonstrators.

Gilberto Carvalho, the administration鈥檚 Cabinet chief, sought to separate the election from the tournament.

Joao Augusto de Castro Neves, Latin America director for the Eurasia Group political consultancy, said the World Cup would have little impact on the election.

鈥淭he biggest risk for Rousseff in this election remains the economy, not the World Cup,鈥 he added.

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