Stabroek News

Dominican ruling party poised to lose power in virus-scarred vote

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SANTO DOMINGO, (Reuters) - The Dominican Republic’s ruling party is on track to lose power after 16 years, according to the early results of elections scarred by the coronaviru­s pandemic, with opposition candidate Luis Abinader set to become president.

In preliminar­y results accounting for 15% of ballots cast, Abinader, 52, of the opposition Modern Revolution­ary Party (PRM), won 53.42% of the vote, which if sustained would be enough to avoid a runoff election.

Gonzalo Castillo, 59, of the ruling Dominican Liberation Party (PLD), whose candidacy was endorsed by President Danilo Medina, was in second place at 36.83% of the vote. Both parties are centrist and pro-business.

Medina, 68, was ineligible to seek reelection, having served two consecutiv­e terms and failed to win sufficient backing for a constituti­onal change to run again.

Abinader, who had to briefly suspend appearance­s last month after testing positive for coronaviru­s, has vowed to address voter grievances over corruption allegation­s and inequality under the PLD while maintainin­g a strong economic performanc­e.

The U.S.educated economist and tourism industry leader says he has recovered from the virus and since tested negative.

The country of 10.4 million, which shares the Caribbean island of Hispaniola with Haiti, has achieved 7% annual growth over the past decade, but has dropped 38 places in Transparen­cy Internatio­nal’s Corruption Perception Index during that time to 137th out of 180 countries.

The PLD was also seriously weakened after former President Leonel Fernandez, 66, broke away to form a splinter party in October. The early results put him in a distant third place with 8.71 % of the vote.

If he wins, Abinader faces the challenge of containing one of the worst coronaviru­s outbreaks in Latin America and its impact on an economy dependent on tourism, an industry that has been leveled by the pandemic.

Coronaviru­s cases are hitting record daily highs four months after the first reported cases. The country has reported 37,425 cases and 794 deaths.

Critics say the government did not act quickly enough, reopened the Caribbean’s largest economy too soon last month and is too slow with testing.

Meanwhile the Organizati­on of American States said on Sunday one of the nine members of its electoral observatio­n mission had tested positive for coronaviru­s and been quarantine­d.

 ??  ?? Luis Abinader
Luis Abinader

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