Miami Herald (Sunday)

Bolivia overcame crisis, held a clean election

- BY JULIE TURKEWITZ New York Times

LA PAZ, BOLIVIA

As election day neared, candidates fretted over the possibilit­y of fraud. Voters across Bolivia questioned the solidity of the electoral process. And many worried that the result – any result – would provoke anger and violence from the other side.

But in the days that followed the vote, something unexpected happened.

The election went smoothly, and its results were quickly and widely accepted – an accomplish­ment that is being celebrated by many in a country that has weathered years of threats to its democracy.

“Democracy won in Bolivia,” said Fernanda Wanderley, director of the socioecono­mic institute at the Universida­d Católica Boliviana.

Exit polls on Sunday showed one candidate,

Luis Arce, clearly taking the lead. His main opponent, Carlos Mesa, conceded the next day. On Friday, Bolivia’s electoral tribunal confirmed that Arce would indeed be the next president of Bolivia, matching the exit polls and voters’ expectatio­ns.

In the end, Arce won

55% of the vote, and Mesa had just under 29%, a win far bigger than Arce’s advisers had predicted.

Arce is the chosen candidate of the former president, Evo Morales, a towering figure of Bolivian politics. Morales is a socialist who transforme­d the country, lifting hundreds of thousands of people out of poverty and prioritizi­ng Indigenous and rural communitie­s in a nation that had been run for centuries by a mostly white elite.

The numbers indicate clear voter interest in continuing with Morales’ political project, and his party, Movimiento al Socialismo, or MAS.

But voters and analysts also say the election signals a promising moment for a democratic system that had been slipping under Morales, who bypassed the rules in his government’s own constituti­on to run for a third and then a fourth term, and was criticized for persecutin­g opponents, harassing journalist­s and stacking the judiciary in his favor.

His attempt to run for a fourth term last year ended in allegation­s of electoral fraud, and demands from opponents and protesters in the streets that he step down. Once police and the armed forces joined the call for his resignatio­n, he left the country – and called his ouster a coup. Sunday’s election was a do-over of last year’s.

The president who has served in an interim capacity over the last year, Jeanine Añez, an opponent of Morales, has also persecuted her political enemies and stifled dissent, and infuriated many Bolivians by postponing the new election.

Her hard-line anti-MAS rhetoric, which made little distinctio­n between party officials and everyday voters, turned off many Bolivians, said Raúl Peñaranda, a Bolivian journalist.

In interviews, many Bolivians attributed the relative calm after the election and the high turnout for Arce to a yearning for stability.

In the country’s fewer than 200 years, it has seen 190 revolution­s and coups. The last year included deadly protests, a presidenti­al ouster, a health crisis that killed thousands, a financial crisis that has left many hungry and a contentiou­s election that has riven the nation.

Morales, who was in office for 14 years, was Bolivia’s longest-serving president and presided over the country at a time when a commoditie­s boom sent money flowing into the country.

Arce was his economics minister for much of that time, and is often associated with that prosperity and relative political stability. He has also promised to stay in office just five years.

All of this seems to have convinced more than half of the country to give him a chance.

“I think the crisis of the last year did a lot of damage to Bolivian democracy, part of an accumulati­ve process,” Wanderley said. “But in the end, Bolivia found a path to overcome that crisis, and was able to conduct a clean, legitimate election in which the winner was decided by the popular vote.”

After Morales’ ouster, Bolivia also made a concerted effort to address mistrust in the electoral system.

It overhauled its electoral tribunal, which had been stacked with Morales loyalists. It also rolled out a voter education campaign and cleaned up the electoral rolls, said Naledi Lester, an election expert working in La Paz to assess the vote for the Carter Center, a nonprofit that has been observing elections since 1989.

Her colleague José Antonio de Gabriel, also working in La Paz, said the tribunal conducted an organized vote, and “acted with impartiali­ty and independen­ce and protected political plurality.”

Morales was forced out last year after his critics accused his government of trying to rig the vote in his favor.

 ?? TYLER HICKS NYT ?? Citizens are seen on the streets of La Paz, Bolivia, as the country awaits official election results Oct. 19. The election of Luis Arce, a former economics minister to Evo Morales, went smoothly, and its results were quickly and widely accepted.
TYLER HICKS NYT Citizens are seen on the streets of La Paz, Bolivia, as the country awaits official election results Oct. 19. The election of Luis Arce, a former economics minister to Evo Morales, went smoothly, and its results were quickly and widely accepted.
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