Kuwait Times

El Salvador’s Bukele looks set to increase power with allies

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SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador: El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele looked set to increase his power as his allies took a clear lead in legislativ­e elections, according to preliminar­y results early yesterday.

“Victory,” Bukele tweeted in anticipati­on of a win, along with a video of fireworks in the capital San Salvador. The New Ideas party, founded by Bukele and contesting an election for the first time, together with the Grand Alliance for National Unity (GANA), through which he came to power, had more than half the votes according to the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE), with 64 percent of ballots counted after Sunday’s elections.

The official count will only begin today, where it will be determined how many of the 84 seats in Congress each party will take, a TSE source said. Bukele also shared results of an exit poll by Costa Rican firm Cid Gallup which gave New Ideas a large majority in parliament, with more than 67 percent of the vote, although technical details of the survey were not released.

“New Ideas + GANA will have more than 60 deputies (...) Thank you to the Salvadoran people. Thank God,” he tweeted. If the results are confirmed, Bukele could fulfill his objective of winning an absolute majority in parliament, which would give the president more power over crucial decisions and lawmaking. Bukele, accused of authoritar­ianism by his detractors, hopes to have his hands untied after a frustratin­g two years of blockages by an opposition­controlled parliament.

Opinion polls have projected victory for his two allied parties. Long queues of voters wearing face masks amid the coronaviru­s pandemic formed well before voting started, though many stations opened hours late. The delay prompted Bukele to level accusation­s of wrongdoing against the TSE on Twitter. “We told them 1,000 times that, whether through corruption or incompeten­ce, they would do everything wrong,” he said.

But an election observer told AFP he had seen no evidence of voter fraud. About 40,000 police, soldiers and internatio­nal observers were deployed to oversee the balloting, which came after the worst political violence in years claimed two lives last month. After polls closed, the Organizati­on of American States described election day as peaceful.

TSE president Dora Martinez said 51 percent of the country’s 5.4 million voters had taken part in the polls to elect 84 members of the Legislativ­e Assembly from among 10 political parties.

Elected in 2019 for a five-year term, Bukele, who is 39 and is of Palestinia­n and Greek descent, has had trouble getting some programs approved in a parliament dominated by two opposition parties-the rightwing Arena and leftist FMLN.

 ??  ?? Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele
Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele

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