Bangkok Post

Singer faces fiction author in runoff

-

SAN JOSE: Christian singer Fabricio Alvarado Munoz will face a centre-left fiction writer in Costa Rica’s presidenti­al election runoff, seeking to thwart the advance of gay rights with a victory for evangelica­l conservati­ves in the Central American nation.

The former TV anchor won the first round on Sunday but fell far short the 40% of votes needed to avert a second-round. He will compete in the runoff on April 1 against former Labor Minister Carlos Alvarado Quesada, who was also once a singer — in a progressiv­e rock band.

The rise of Mr Alvarado Munoz on a ticket fiercely opposing gay marriage was helped by the decline of a centrist two-party system that stretched back decades in a country long considered one of the most stable in Latin America.

His success reflects the rise of evangelica­l churches in the region which Javier Corrales, a political science professor at Amherst College, says are helping to lead a coordinate­d backlash against the expansion of LGBT rights.

“There’s nothing more progressiv­e than defending life and family,” Mr Alvarado Munoz said on Sunday. He added on Monday that no members of his cabinet would support gay marriage or abortion.

The telegenic writer of Christian songs such as Your Love is Everything, won 24.9% of Sunday’s vote. He was elected to the national assembly in 2014 as the only federal deputy representi­ng the Christian-backed National Restoratio­n Party (PRN).

On Monday, the PRN appeared to have increased its presence in the national assembly to 14 seats. The party has opposed the progressiv­e policies of outgoing President Luis Guillermo Solis, such as samesex marriage, in vitro fertilisat­ion and sex education in schools.

A well-known television news anchor before he turned to religion, Mr Alvarado Munoz shot to political prominence during the campaign by denouncing a ruling by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights calling on Costa Rica to give civil marriage rights to same-sex couples.

“All the vestiges of gender ideology will be eliminated from public policy in Costa Rica,” he said in his government plan.

The rise of protestant churches in Latin America has filtered into politics across the region. Guatemala’s President Jimmy Morales and Brazilian presidenti­al candidate Marina Silva are both evangelica­l.

Almost a fifth of Latin Americans now identify as protestant, according to a 2014 paper by Pew Research Center. Most are Pentecosta­lists, a movement that emphasises divine experience­s such as miraculous healing and prophesies, and has become a force in conservati­ve Latin American politics.

“They are transformi­ng conservati­ve politics in the region, giving homophobia a new momentum and posing new roadblocks to the expansion of LGBT rights,” Amherst’s Corrales said in a draft of a new paper on the topic.

Unlike his rival, Mr Alvarado Quesada backs the court’s decision on same-sex couples. Even though Costa Rica’s 3.3 million voters mostly describe themselves as conservati­ve, he appears to have benefited by energising voters worried by the strident tone of the campaign.

The former Procter & Gamble employee has also tried to connect with young voters, highlighti­ng his university rock band Dramatika and career as a fiction writer. H

“The Costa Rica of the 21st century needs a government that knows how to advance with strength, love and happiness, equality,” he said on Sunday evening.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand