Proposal to Ban Guns in Brazil Fails to Win a Single State

Weapons sales will not be banned in Brazil. On the basis of the returns tallied so far (Monday morning), representing 99.96% of the ballot boxes, 63.94% of the voters said "no" to the ban, while 36.06% said "yes."

The 21.84% abstention rate in yesterday’s (October 23) referendum was higher than in the last two elections. Approximately 20 million Brazilians either failed to show up or presented justifications for their absence at one of the more than 320 thousand polling booths in the country. Up to this moment, the percentage of blank votes is 1.39%, and invalid votes, 1.68%.

The proposal to ban arms and ammunition sales in the country, supported by the parliamentary For a Brazil Without Weapons front, failed to win a single state. The region with the highest percentage of votes against the prohibition was the South (79.59%), followed by the North (71.06%), the Center-West (68.60%), Southeast (60.31%), and the Northeast (57.51%).

Rio Grande do Sul was the state with the highest proportion of "no" votes: 86.83%. Pernambuco, on the other hand, returned the highest percentage of votes favorable to the ban: 45.51%. In the nation’s capital, 56.83% of the population voted against the prohibition and 43.17%, in favor.

The final outcome of the referendum should be announced today by the Federal Elections Board (TSE, Tribunal Superior Eleitoral). Votes are still being tallied in the states of Acre, in which the returns for 99.80% of the ballot boxes have been counted, Mato Grosso, with 99.90% of the counting done, and Pará, with 98.79%.

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

After Another Record Week Brazilian Exports Reach US$ 32 Bi in 2006

Brazilian exports added up to US$ 2.833 billion in the first week of April, ...

Every 15 Seconds a Woman Is Beaten in Brazil, Mostly by Her Husband

A woman is beaten every 15 seconds in Brazil, which means that 2.1 million ...

Portugal, a Brazil Colony

Wandering around the streets of Lisbon, you will eventually bump into a Brazilian. It ...

Brazil Industry Blames Economic Downturn on High Interests

Employment in the São Paulo industrial sector rose only 0.38% in May, after rising ...

Brazil Cuts US$ 30 Bi from Budget, Freezes Hiring and Starts Crackdown on Fraud

Brazil will cut 50 billion reais (US$ 30 billion) from its 2011 budget. The ...

Brazilian Industrialists Show Very Cautious Optimism

After expressing uncertainty over the directions of the Brazilian economy in July, Brazil’s industrialists ...

Ailing Varig Adds Flights to Brazil from NY and Miami in December

Varig Brazilian Airlines, the largest air carrier in Latin America and the anchor for ...

Brazil’s Chancellor Busy in Europe Dealing with World Trade

Brazilian Minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim, lead the G-20 ministerial meeting Wednesday, November ...

Brazil’s Medical Industry Grows 21% and Generates US$ 3.74 Billion

São Paulo's metropolitan region continues to be the Brazil's leading industrial hub. The companies ...

Brazil: Lula’s Empty Promises

The Brazilian people does not need Lula, nor wants him anymore. The Brazilian President ...