Cape Times

Cloudy outlook for Costa Rican election

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SAN JOSE – Costa Ricans voted on Sunday in a presidenti­al race shaken by an internatio­nal court ruling saying the country should let same-sex couples get married.

Evangelica­l candidate Fabricio Alvarado recently vaulted into first place in opinion polls after he took a strong stance against gay marriage, which about twothirds of Costa Ricans also oppose.

His closest rivals were agri-business person Antonio Alvarez of the opposition National Liberation Party and Carlos Alvarado of the governing Citizens’ Action Party.

But the outlook was cloudy because none of 13 candidates polled at more than 17% and surveys indicated that more than a third of likely voters were undecided.

If no candidate reaches 40% of the total vote, the top two finishers advance to an April 1 run-off.

“I see this as very divided,” said Paula Rodriguez, a psychologi­st who cast her vote in Moravia, on the north-eastern outskirts of the capital, San Jose. “I really think nobody knows what will happen.”

The January decision by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights came to play a central role in the campaign. The court also ordered the country to grant same-sex couples such rights as the ability to inherit estates and adopt children.

Political analyst Francisco Barahona said that it came as an “external shock” for Costa Rica, a majority Roman Catholic nation with an increasing evangelica­l population.

Alvarado, a journalist, preacher and Christian singer, called the ruling a “sovereign violation” and saw his support balloon in the polls as socially conservati­ve voters gravitated to that stance.

“Our message has already won. We are very happy and we hope we have convinced more undecideds,” Alvarado told local media.

Some voters had other issues on their minds. Carlos Morales, who cast a ballot in the Guadalupe district of San Jose, said his biggest concern is that the next president manage the government’s deficit without creating new taxes.

Voters were also selecting the 57 delegates that make up the Assembly. – AP

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