The Guardian Australia

Nayib Bukele re-elected as El Salvador president in landslide win

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El Salvador’s president, Nayib Bukele, has won a thumping victory in elections after voters cast aside concerns about erosion of democracy to reward him for a fierce gang crackdown that transforme­d security in the central American country.

Thousands of Bukele’s supporters clad in cyan blue and waving flags thronged San Salvador’s central square to celebrate his re-election, which the 42-year-old leader termed a “referendum” on his government.

Bukele declared himself the winner before official results were announced, claiming to have attained more than 85% of the vote. Provisiona­l results showed Bukele winning 83% support with 31% of the ballots counted.

His New Ideas party is expected to win almost all of the 60 seats in the legislativ­e body, tightening its grip on the country and bestowing Bukele, the most powerful leader in El Salvador’s modern history, with even more sway.

“All together the opposition was pulverised,” Bukele, standing with his wife on the balcony of the National

Palace, told his supporters. “El Salvador went from being the most unsafe [country] to the safest. Now in these next five years, wait to see what we are going to do.”

New Ideas’ electoral success means Bukele will wield unpreceden­ted power and be able to overhaul El Salvador’s constituti­on, which his opponents fear will result in scrapping of term limits.

Wildly popular, Bukele has campaigned on the success of his security strategy under which authoritie­s suspended civil liberties to arrest more than 75,000 Salvadoran­s without charges. The detentions led to a sharp decline in nationwide murder rates and fundamenta­lly altered a country of 6.3 million people that was once among the world’s most dangerous.

Some analysts have said the mass incarcerat­ion of 1% of the population is not sustainabl­e in the long term.

Hours earlier, bullish Bukele held a press conference and said his party needed all the support it could muster to maintain its anti-gang fight and continue reshaping El Salvador.

“So, if we have already overcome our cancer, with metastases that were the gangs, now we only have to recover and be the person we always wanted to be,” said Bukele.

Few doubted the outcome of the elections. Polls showed most voters wanted to reward Bukele for decimating the crime groups that made life intolerabl­e in El Salvador and fuelled waves of migration to the United States.

Guadalupe Guillen, a 55-year-old shopkeeper, showed up at the victory party dressed in a tunic and Arab scarf, a nod to Bukele’s Palestinia­n family heritage.

“We are celebratin­g, thanking him, thanking God, for getting us out of this gang problem. We don’t want to go back to that horrible past,” said Guillen, who added she no longer pays $300 (£238) in extortion to the gangs every fortnight.

“Democracy is not at risk because all the people have voted for him,” said Guillen, echoing the government’s stance regarding concerns by western countries of authoritar­ian drift under Bukele.

Candidates for FMLN and Arena, two parties that rotated power between them until 2019, were set to receive single-digit support as voters once again rejected traditiona­l parties whose rule was marked by violence and corruption for decades.

A firebrand politician who often spars with foreign leaders and critics on social media, Bukele came to power in 2019 trouncing traditiona­l parties with a vow to eliminate gang violence and rejuvenate a stagnant economy.

He used his party’s supermajor­ity in the legislativ­e assembly to pack the courts with loyalists and overhaul state institutio­ns, solidifyin­g his control of key parts of the government. He also championed the introducti­on of bitcoin as legal tender, drawing criticism from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF).

El Salvador’s supreme electoral tribunal last year permitted him to run for a second term even though the country’s constituti­on prohibits it. Opponents fear Bukele will seek to rule for life, following the example of Nicaragua’d president, Daniel Ortega.

“Everyone knows it is unconstitu­tional to re-elect the president but what people want is security. They don’t care if it is unconstitu­tional, they just want to feel safe,” said Josue Galdamez, 39, a businessma­n and trader who supported Bukele because of his crusade against gangs.

When asked on Sunday by reporters if he planned to reform the constituti­on to include indefinite re-election, Bukele said he “didn’t think a constituti­onal reform would be necessary”, but did not directly answer questions on whether he would try to run for a third term.

The Chinese embassy in San Salvador in a post on X congratula­ted Bukele and his party “for the historic victory in these elections”.

Rights groups have said El Salvador’s democracy is under attack. Bukele has taken such concerns in his stride, at one point changing his profile on X to say: “World’s coolest dictator.“

Bukele’s biggest challenge in his second term is likely to be the economy, central America’s slowest growing during his time in power. More than a quarter of Salvadoran­s live in poverty.

Extreme poverty has doubled and private investment has tumbled under Bukele. There has not been much momentum on his highly publicised plans for Bitcoin City, a tax-free crypto haven powered by geothermal energy from a volcano.

The IMF, which is negotiatin­g a $1.3bn bailout with El Salvador, in late 2023 described the country’s fiscal situation as “fragile”.

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