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When will voters re-elect populists? Lessons from COVID-19 in Brazil

When will voters re-elect populists? Lessons from COVID-19 in Brazil
When will voters re-elect populists? Lessons from COVID-19 in Brazil
COVID-19 preceded electoral upsets in many countries, but did it cause them? Using both OLS and instrumental variable methods on granular electoral data we find that, in the case of Brazil, (i) both COVID-19 mortality and underlying cases played a significant role in reducing the incumbent candidate’s votes; (ii) the absolute COVID-19 electoral penalty was stronger in more closely competitive municipalities; (iii) COVID-19 lost its relative importance in more competitive municipalities to factors, such as economic growth, electoral mobilization, inequality, as well as education and employment structure. As a result, while a typical voter at the national level may have been more interested in the healthcare costs of the COVID-19 pandemic, their electoral focus shifted to the economy in more competitive municipalities. This is a novel result on the electability of incumbent populists, implying changing perceptions of political competence when elections become more competitive. This result helps explain re-election strategies of incumbent populists who tend to downplay failures in managing the COVID-19 healthcare crisis and emphasize the state of the economy. Our results imply that populists can indeed boost their re-election chances if they exploit this political trade-off.
Brazil, COVID-19, Comparative populism, Contestability, Electoral outcomes, Populist governance
1478-3320
Yahampath, Dylan
e7f75b88-b03e-4ac1-8a3d-7ffa3f6d5355
Stankov, Petar
b552c934-099a-4337-87f0-501fd3a41b81
Enilov, Martin
a33a63d6-b26a-4ab5-88bb-d92151983cde
Yahampath, Dylan
e7f75b88-b03e-4ac1-8a3d-7ffa3f6d5355
Stankov, Petar
b552c934-099a-4337-87f0-501fd3a41b81
Enilov, Martin
a33a63d6-b26a-4ab5-88bb-d92151983cde

Yahampath, Dylan, Stankov, Petar and Enilov, Martin (2025) When will voters re-elect populists? Lessons from COVID-19 in Brazil. Comparative Economic Studies. (doi:10.1057/s41294-025-00261-5).

Record type: Article

Abstract

COVID-19 preceded electoral upsets in many countries, but did it cause them? Using both OLS and instrumental variable methods on granular electoral data we find that, in the case of Brazil, (i) both COVID-19 mortality and underlying cases played a significant role in reducing the incumbent candidate’s votes; (ii) the absolute COVID-19 electoral penalty was stronger in more closely competitive municipalities; (iii) COVID-19 lost its relative importance in more competitive municipalities to factors, such as economic growth, electoral mobilization, inequality, as well as education and employment structure. As a result, while a typical voter at the national level may have been more interested in the healthcare costs of the COVID-19 pandemic, their electoral focus shifted to the economy in more competitive municipalities. This is a novel result on the electability of incumbent populists, implying changing perceptions of political competence when elections become more competitive. This result helps explain re-election strategies of incumbent populists who tend to downplay failures in managing the COVID-19 healthcare crisis and emphasize the state of the economy. Our results imply that populists can indeed boost their re-election chances if they exploit this political trade-off.

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Accepted/In Press date: 11 July 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 September 2025
Published date: 12 September 2025
Keywords: Brazil, COVID-19, Comparative populism, Contestability, Electoral outcomes, Populist governance

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 506362
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506362
ISSN: 1478-3320
PURE UUID: b1e04261-eabe-45d9-804e-8638766a2eef
ORCID for Martin Enilov: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7671-6975

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Date deposited: 05 Nov 2025 17:35
Last modified: 06 Nov 2025 03:05

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Contributors

Author: Dylan Yahampath
Author: Petar Stankov
Author: Martin Enilov ORCID iD

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