As news of Lula’s victory spread, a sea of red – the colours of his Workers’ Party – massed on São Paulo’s main street, Paulista Avenue, eager for a glimpse of the president-elect.
“Lula has returned,” the crowd chanted, as they let off red smoke in celebration.
“It was a very hard campaign,” Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva admitted to the crowds a few hours later. “It wasn’t Lula against Bolsonaro, it was a campaign of democracy against barbarity.”
Like him or loathe him, the fact that Lula, once Brazil’s most popular politician, is returning to the top job is a moment in history.
“I feel free, relieved not only for the Brazilian people but for the whole planet – for the Amazon, for democracy, for human rights,” said 47-year-old Viridiana Aleixo, while admitting that Brazil remained very divided. “We have to be very patient, and we have to leave the anger and hatred behind.”