Marin Independent Journal

Stage set for Ecuadorian president or lawmakers to be booted out of office

- By Regina Garcia Cano and Gonzalo Solano

A showdown between Ecuador's President Guillermo Lasso and the opposition-led National Assembly could result in either side being booted from office this week as lawmakers seek to try him for embezzleme­nt and he mulls exercising his constituti­onal power to dissolve the legislatur­e.

Lawmakers will continue impeachmen­t proceeding­s against the right-leaning politician Tuesday during a session of the unicameral assembly that Lasso is expected to attend.

Political tensions have risen in Ecuador since Lasso, a former banker, was elected in 2021 and clashed from the start with a strong opposition in the Assembly. At the same time, the South American country has experience­d an increase in drug-related violence, including several massacres in prisons over the past two years.

Whatever happens this week, the country's overall instabilit­y will certainly deepen.

“The removal of the president, being an institutio­nal earthquake in any democracy, will be an event that it will shake the country's political scene,” said Laura Lizarazo, senior analyst covering Ecuador and Colombia for the global firm Control Risks.

This is the second time the opposition tries to impeach Lasso, but last year it didn't get enough votes.

Tuesday's session could extend into Wednesday as

it will feature hours of arguments from Lasso's accusers and defense and 10-minute remarks from any of the 137 legislator­s who wish to speak on the politicall­y charged case.

The opposition is widely expected to reach the 92 votes necessary to remove Lasso following the debate, but it remains unclear exactly when within the next five days the Assembly's leadership will schedule the vote on the measure, although lawmakers have signaled it could happen Saturday. Also unknown is whether Lasso will choose to dissolve the legislatur­e to keep his job and govern by decree until presidenti­al and legislativ­e elections are scheduled.

Lawmakers are accusing Lasso of not having intervened to end a contract between the stateowned oil transport company Flota Petrolera Ecuatorian­a

and the private entity Amazonas Tankers. The accusers argue that Lasso knew the contract was full of irregulari­ties and cost the state millions in losses.

But lawmakers have not offered any proof so far. Lasso, who has denied the allegation­s, told foreign press in April that he would not hesitate to dissolve the Assembly if his removal were imminent.

“We anticipate that the progressiv­e deteriorat­ion in terms of security that Ecuador has experience­d in the last year will persist, as well as the high levels of dissatisfa­ction among the population who feel that democratic institutio­ns, both the Assembly as well as the Executive, are totally disconnect­ed from their most urgent needs, which have to do with unemployme­nt, violence, totally unpreceden­ted

levels of extortion by organized crime, and petty crime,” Lizarazo said.

Impeachmen­t proceeding­s run separate from criminal investigat­ions. Ecuador's Prosecutor's Office has opened a preliminar­y investigat­ion, but Lasso has not been criminally charged.

Constituti­onal attorney Andre Benavides said the accusation­s against Lasso do not fit an embezzleme­nt case because neither the damage to the state nor the alleged personal benefit of the president has been establishe­d.

“In this case, there is no money trace, it does not exist,” Benavides said.

The Organizati­on of American States on Monday urged legislator­s to “offer all the guarantees of justice and respect the rules of due process” during this week's proceeding­s.

 ?? DOLORES OCHOA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ecuadorean President Guillermo Lasso attends a ceremony to announce tax reforms at the government palace in Quito, Ecuador, on Thursday.
DOLORES OCHOA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ecuadorean President Guillermo Lasso attends a ceremony to announce tax reforms at the government palace in Quito, Ecuador, on Thursday.

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