This Sunday, October 2, general elections will be held in Brazil. The current president of the country, Jair Bolsonaro, is seeking reelection for which he will have to defeat Lula da Silva, the leader of the Workers' Party.
The latter was already a tenant of the Planalto Palace from 2003 to 2010.
The elections will be marked by an intense polarization in the South American country, a polarization in which, as we shall see, the media have played a decisive role, as they have attacked Bolsonaro with extreme harshness.
Not in vain, he represents a dike of contention -probably the. . .