Brazil leader scraps bid, supports ex-finance minister
RIO DE JANEIRO — Acknowledging the unlikelihood of his re-election, Brazil’s deeply unpopular president on Tuesday said he wasn’t running and endorsed his former finance minister for the top office less than five months before voters in Latin America’s largest nation pick a new leader.
President Michel Temer’s decision to back former Finance Minister Henrique Meirelles came after months of weighing whether to run himself. Temer’s approval rating has consistently been below 10 per cent — at one point it reached 3 per cent — and mounting corruption allegations against him have frequently drowned out his government’s ambitious reform agenda.
“Meirelles is the best of the best,” Temer said, standing next to the former finance minister at an event in Brasilia put on by Meirelles’ Brazilian Democratic Movement party.
In his short speech, broadcast by Globo TV, Temer acknowledged his chances of re-election were slim.


