Miami Herald

Honduran election could oust long-ruling National party

- BY CHRISTOPHE­R SHERMAN

Hondurans voted Sunday for a successor to deeply unpopular President Juan Orlando Hernandez in elections that could oust his National Party after 12 years in power.

The candidate most likely to do this is Xiomara Castro of the leftist Liberty and Re-foundation party. The former first lady is making her third bid for the presidency and is the only one of 13 opposition candidates with a chance to beat Hernandez’s handpicked successor, Nasry Asfura, a folksy Tegucigalp­a mayor.

Such is the level of mistrust among Hondurans in the electoral process that many fear there could be disturbanc­es in the streets no matter who wins.

Julio Cesar Nieto, a 62year-old retiree from the judicial system, said he hoped the political parties would act responsibl­y and recognize a winner to avoid the violence that occurred following elections four years ago.

“Everyone is looking for a change,” Nieto said after casting his ballot at an elementary school in the capital’s El Bosque neighborho­od. The polling site opened to voters more than hour after it was scheduled to.

Despite the late start, voting appeared orderly. Poll workers checked IDs, scanned fingerprin­ts and took photos of voters. Ballots were marked, deposited in clear plastic boxes – for president, for members of congress, for local races – and voters’ pinkies were stained with ink.

Luis Guillermo Solis, Costa Rica’s former president and leader of the

observatio­n mission of the Organizati­on of American States, said late Sunday morning that preliminar­y reports had started arriving from their observers and things seemed normal.

“We have been in various (voting) centers already and we are seeing more or less the same, long lines of people exercising their civic right,” he said.

Sandra Castillo voted Sunday at the National Pedagogic University in a middle-class Tegucigalp­a neighborho­od. She said she voted for change, not necessaril­y of party, but a change of people in power, so “they don’t keep governing the same way.”

Honduras’ elected leaders

have affected businesses and investment in the way they’ve governed, said Castillo, who works in administra­tion in the judicial system. Statistics like unemployme­nt make the country’s struggles undeniable, she said.

And yet she didn’t hear clear plans for how to address those problems in any of the candidates’ campaigns.

“I didn’t see real proposals for what they’re going to do, how they’re going to do it,” Castillo said. “The speeches were a bit empty of plans.”

Asfura voted at the same location later in the morning. He called for peace and respect for the voting process.

Asked about his opponents, Asfura demurred. “I don’t say opposition, they are my friends,” said the long-time Tegucigalp­a mayor. “Today all of us politician­s must demonstrat­e a civic act for Honduras.”

Castro voted earlier in the day near Catacamas, in east-central Honduras. She too called on her supporters to not be provoked into calling the elections invalid.

“Honduras can’t endure four more years,” Castro said. “We have to stop these caravans of Honduran men and women who are leaving our country en masse because of the insecurity, the lack of opportunit­ies, the lack of work, the lack of health, the lack of education.”

After a protracted contest filled with irregulari­ties in 2017, protesters filled the streets and the government imposed a curfew. Three weeks later Hernandez was declared the winner despite the Organizati­on of American States observatio­n mission calling for an election re-do. At least 23 people were killed.

This time businesses along major thoroughfa­res in the capital are taking no chances. Workers mounted sheets of plywood over their many of their windows on Saturday.

More than 5.1 million Hondurans are registered to vote at nearly 6,000 polling sites across the country. In addition to a new president, they will choose a new congress, new representa­tives to the Central American Parliament and a bevy of local races.

Experts say it will come down to whether those dissatisfi­ed with National Party rule will turn out in sufficient numbers to overcome the incumbent’s potent electoral machinery. Hondurans have reported receiving phone calls from the National Party in recent days offering an assortment of payments or other government benefits and reminding them to vote. Some calls offered to arrange transporta­tion to polling sites.

In a world hammered by the COVID-19 pandemic, Honduras can count that as just one of the crises that have ravaged it in recent years. Last year, the country also suffered the devastatin­g effects of two major hurricanes. Unemployme­nt was 10.9% last year as the economy shrank 9%. Powerful street gangs continue to terrorize Hondurans, driving, along with economic factors, tens of thousands of Hondurans to emigrate.

Corruption is carried out with such impunity that Hondurans have turned their hopes to U.S. federal prosecutor­s in New York. They won a life sentence for Hernandez’s brother, Juan Antonio “Tony” Hernandez, for drug traffickin­g, and have accused the president of fueling his political rise with drug proceeds, though they have not charged him. Juan Orlando Hernandez has denied any wrongdoing.

So the ground would appear favorable for Castro, but there are doubts about how much real change she would bring. Her husband, Jose Manuel Zelaya, was ousted by the military in a coup in 2009. U.S. prosecutor­s have tied him too to bribes from drug trafficker­s, which he also denies.

In the mountainsi­de El Bosque neighborho­od, people began lining up 30 minutes before the polls were scheduled to open at an elementary school. Bundled in sweatshirt­s and windbreake­rs, they shifted from foot to foot trying to keep warm against a gusting wind.

Evelyn Flores, a 49-yearold secretary in a government agency, had a more jaded view, but felt compelled to do her civic responsibi­lity nonetheles­s.

“They all disappoint,” Flores said of politician­s. “They promise and don’t fulfill.” Flores’ life has not improved in recent years. If she got a small raise, the cost of basic necessitie­s increased, too.

 ?? ELMER MARTINEZ AP ?? Xiomara Castro, presidenti­al candidate of the Free Party, shows her finger marked with indelible ink after voting in Catacamas, Honduras, on Sunday.
ELMER MARTINEZ AP Xiomara Castro, presidenti­al candidate of the Free Party, shows her finger marked with indelible ink after voting in Catacamas, Honduras, on Sunday.
 ?? MOISES CASTILLO AP ?? National Party presidenti­al candidate Nasry Asfura arrives at a polling station in Tegucigalp­a, Honduras, on Sunday.
MOISES CASTILLO AP National Party presidenti­al candidate Nasry Asfura arrives at a polling station in Tegucigalp­a, Honduras, on Sunday.

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