Business Day

Bukele gets super majority

- Nelson Renteria and Sarah Kinosian

El Salvador’s election authority on Monday announced that President Nayib Bukele’s ruling New Ideas party would control a super majority in the next legislatur­e with 54 out of 60 seats, following a hand count of votes.

Opposition parties earlier on Monday had asked the body to void the results of the February 4 Congress elections and re-do the vote after the hand count of ballots revealed several irregulari­ties.

However, it is unlikely the election authority will agree.

Just hours after polls closed, Bukele declared himself the winner of the presidenti­al election, and his party victorious in the Congress ballot.

Despite Bukele claiming at the time that his party had won 58 out of 60 seats, in the days that followed, El Salvador’s electoral body began a hand count of the vote after declaring a failure in the voting system following numerous reports of irregulari­ties, glitches, and power and internet outages.

Electoral authoritie­s on Sunday confirmed Bukele’s whopping win with almost 85% of the vote and on Monday that his party now controlled a 54-seat super majority.

A super majority in Congress is seen giving Bukele unpreceden­ted power.

This will include allowing him to change the country’s constituti­on and continue to shelve constituti­onal rights in his popular crackdown on the country’s gangs, which has drawn criticisms from rights groups.

The right-wing Nationalis­t Republican Alliance (ARENA) and National Concertion parties will each hold two seats and the Christian Democratic and VAMOS parties will hold one seat a piece.

On Monday the leaders of ARENA and two emerging progressiv­e parties, Nuestro Tiempo and VAMOS, said they had documented 69 “anomalies” in the voting and vote-counting process.

Among the anomalies cited were failures in the system meant to process and send ballots; duplicatio­n and, in some cases, triplicati­on of votes in favour of Bukele’s party; ballots abandoned in voting centres; and broken seals on packages containing votes.

At the weekend, an electoral mission from the Organisati­on of American States (OAS) expressed concern about the delay in the vote count and problems that arose in the hand count.

The OAS observers cited the electoral body’s “lack of control” over the voting and vote count process, problems with vote authentica­tion and poor training of people entering results.

They also noted Bukele ’ s New Ideas party outnumbere­d the opposition for election observers and noted members from the party had intimidati­ng attitudes towards the opposition while trying to obstruct the election observatio­n mission and the press.

VAMOS deputy Claudia Ortiz told journalist­s they had called for the election results to be voided and the vote repeated “due to serious violations of the constituti­on, serious violations of citizen’s political rights and of the candidates and, especially, because the principle of not falsifying the will of the people has been seriously violated”.

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