By AFPRelaxnews | Oct 17, 2022
The electoral decision Brazilians face is so divisive that the political filter on dating apps is "the most used by Brazilians," said Javier Tuiran, communications director for Bumble in Latin America
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The law of physics that opposites attract is not always the case on dating apps such as Tinder, Bumble, Happn and Grindr—certainly not in Brazil's highly polarized dating world.
Image: Mauro Pimentel / AFP [/CAPTION]
In Brazil, supporting the right presidential candidate may actually get you a hot date. "Please tell me that you aren't a leftist, you are too pretty to be one," Vivian read in one message she received on the dating app Tinder.
But Vivian supports Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, a leftist who is one of two politicians facing off in a presidential runoff vote on October 30. So no match occurred, a sign of how politics has seeped into intimate everyday realms.
Indeed, the law of physics that opposites attract is not always the case on dating apps such as Tinder, Bumble, Happn and Grindr—certainly not in Brazil's highly polarized dating world.
_RSS_"I am a leftist (and) I will ask who you vote for. It's important that we think alike," warns Gabriela S., a 25-year-old psychologist in Sao Paulo, on her Bumble profile. She asked to keep her surname private.
"It makes no sense for me to connect with people on the right," said Gabriela, who added that she wouldn't even enjoy a beer with someone who holds racist views or contempt for the LBGTQ community.
Supporters of President Jair Bolsonaro, a far-right retired military officer who took office in 2019, have carved out their own space on social media to look for romance.
A Facebook group page called Bolsoteiros, a wordplay that combines "Bolsonaro" with "singles," has 6,700 members.
"The left defends all that we disapprove of," 46-year-old Elaine Souza, a social worker, writes on the page she founded in 2019. But self-selected followers of her group "are halfway to finding a partner."
The electoral decision Brazilians face is so divisive that the political filter on dating apps is "the most used by Brazilians," said Javier Tuiran, communications director for Bumble in Latin America.
Use of the filter "rose in the months before" the first round of presidential elections on October 2, in which Lula won 48 percent of votes and Bolsonaro garnered 43 percent, Tuiran said.