SAO PAULO — President Jair Bolsonaro suffered big losses in Brazil's just-completed municipal elections, with only five mayoral candidates he supported winning their races and none of them in the most important cities.
The president's worst rebuff came in his hometown of Rio de Janeiro, where Mayor Marcelo Crivella was battered in a runoff election Sunday, losing to his center-right predecessor, Eduardo Paes, by 64% to 36%. Crivella, an evangelical pastor, repeatedly used the president in his campaign to try to turn his fortunes.
Another big defeat for Bolsonaro came in Fortaleza, Brazil's fifth most populous city, where little known center-left candidate Sarto Nogueira topped Wagner Gomes, the president's favorite, 51.5% to 48.5%. Gomes had led opinion polls before the campaign began and often displayed Bolsonaro's support, but he sought to distance himself in the campaign's waning days.
A Bolsonaro candidate also lost in Belem, one of the capitals of the Amazon, though it was a close vote. Leftist Edmilson Rodrigues edged Everaldo Iguchi and will be the city's mayor for a third time.
The poor showing by Bolsonaro's candidates began shaping up in the first round of municipal elections two weeks ago.
Sao Paulo, a metropolis of more than 12 million people that is Brazil's biggest city, gave just 10% of its vote to Bolsonaro's candidate, Celso Russomanno, who finished fourth. Sunday's runoff was between two critics of the president, and resulted in center-right Mayor Bruno Covas easily winning reelection over socialist Guilherme Boulos by 60% to 40%.
Other candidates supported by Bolsonaro also failed to make it into Sunday's runoffs in losing by wide margins in populated state capitals like Belo Horizonte, Recife and Manaus. His candidate also lost in Santos, one of the most important cities of Sao Paulo state.
Of the 78 candidates who even ran by adding Bolsonaro's name to their own on the ballot, only one won and that was one of the president's sons, according to Brazil's top electoral court. Carlos Bolsonaro, a key member of his father's social media team, kept his seat on the Rio council with more than 71,000 votes — though that was fewer than the 106,000 he got four years ago.