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Fast Money & Foreign Objects
By David Biller and Raymond Colitt Aug 13, 2014 12:09 PM ET
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Eduardo Campos in Rio de Janeiro in this April 5, 2013 file photo. Photograph: Globo/GDA/Zuma Press
Brazilian presidential candidate Eduardo Campos died today at age 49 in an airplane crash in Santos, Globo News and Folha de S. Paulo reported.
Campos, the former governor of Pernambuco state, was running third in polls ahead of Brazil’s Oct. 5 presidential election. Marina Silva was his running mate.
The airplane that crashed has the registration of the aircraft Campos boarded in Rio de Janeiro, said Iris Campos, an aide to the candidate.
A science and technology minister under former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Campos had 9 percent support in an Ibope poll published Aug. 7. President Dilma Rousseff had 38 percent and Aecio Neves 23 percent. The survey had a margin of error of plus or minus two percentage points.
Campos made his debut in politics at age 21, when he campaigned for Miguel Arraes, his grandfather and former Pernambuco governor. As a legislator in Congress he successfully pushed a bill that cut pension benefits and, as Lula’s science minister, a measure that allowed stem cell research.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-...te-campos-dies-in-plane-crash-globo-news.html

0 Comments Email Print
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Eduardo Campos in Rio de Janeiro in this April 5, 2013 file photo. Photograph: Globo/GDA/Zuma Press
Brazilian presidential candidate Eduardo Campos died today at age 49 in an airplane crash in Santos, Globo News and Folha de S. Paulo reported.
Campos, the former governor of Pernambuco state, was running third in polls ahead of Brazil’s Oct. 5 presidential election. Marina Silva was his running mate.
The airplane that crashed has the registration of the aircraft Campos boarded in Rio de Janeiro, said Iris Campos, an aide to the candidate.
A science and technology minister under former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Campos had 9 percent support in an Ibope poll published Aug. 7. President Dilma Rousseff had 38 percent and Aecio Neves 23 percent. The survey had a margin of error of plus or minus two percentage points.
Campos made his debut in politics at age 21, when he campaigned for Miguel Arraes, his grandfather and former Pernambuco governor. As a legislator in Congress he successfully pushed a bill that cut pension benefits and, as Lula’s science minister, a measure that allowed stem cell research.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-...te-campos-dies-in-plane-crash-globo-news.html
