Poll: Incumbent Rousseff widens lead days ahead of Brazil's presidential ballot on Sunday
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff has pulled ahead of her rival and taken a six-point lead just days before Sunday's presidential vote, according to a poll released Thursday.
A series of recent surveys had indicated that Rousseff, whose left-leaning Workers' Party has governed Brazil the past 12 years, was nosing into the lead in recent days, but Thursday's poll was the first to give her a lead greater than the margin of error.
The survey, by the respected Datafolha agency, said 53 percent of those polled gave support to Rousseff, compared with 47 percent for center-right candidate Aecio Neves. Datafolha surveyed 9,910 people on Wednesday and Thursday, and the margin of error was plus or minus two percentage points.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}Both candidates made campaign stops in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil's second largest city, on Thursday.
Neves met with Rio Archbishop Dom Orani Tempesta before giving a news conference in the city, and Rousseff was also expected to hold a news conference.
The two are to face off in the campaign's last debate Friday evening on Rio-based broadcaster Globo television in what has been the most unpredictable, hotly contested and hard-to-call presidential election in Brazil in decades.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}Both candidates have zig-zagged across the continent-sized nation, covering thousands of kilometers (miles) in recent days in their bid to win over undecided voters, who analysts say may hold the key to the race.