The attitude of the few Brazilians I know is toward the 'armadillo, evacuate now' end of the spectrum, and seriously meaning it, not just the "I'm going to move to Canada" that you get from Democrats in the US every time the GOP gets in. I'm hopeful that Brazil's congress will keep something of a check on him as long as he doesn't go full military coup, they have some ridiculous number of small parties in there as of the most recent elections so he'll need to do a lot of negotiating to get anything done. I do not like his environmental and human rights tone at all.
I suspect it's a pity that Haddad got into the second round - I think someone not from the Workers' Party and from a more middle-ground opposition group would have had a good chance of beating Bolsonaro, the WP have just got super unpopular with all the corruption scandals. I'm really very sceptical that Bolsonaro will manage to clean the system up up rather than him just using such charges as an excuse to round up opponents, but we'll see.
Other news:
> Sri Lanka is having a major crisis after the president, who switched sides from the old ruling party to lead the opposition to victory, has now switched back to try and put his old ally in as Prime Minister and sack the current PM. This seems to be part of a power game between India and China - China preferred the old more authoritarian ruling party, and India prefers the opposition.
> Georgia just had the first round of its presidential election, no candidate got over 40% so the second round run-off may well be quite tight. The run-off candidates are an independent backed by the government plus the candidate of the main opposition party. Both parties are broadly centrist, the government is perhaps marginally more to the left and has a less strong anti-Russian and pro-EU stance than the opposition. The third party, the liberal-conservative European Georgia, will support the opposition in the second round, likely leading to a close race.
> Angela Merkel is quitting her job as leader of the Christian Democratic Union (but not necessarily as Chancellor of Germany) later this year. Germany has seen some boosts in support for the far right, and a much larger boost in support recently for the Green party who are taking votes off both her conservative CDU and the centre-left SPD and could even be on track to become the main second-place party after the CDU.