The Hamilton Spectator

Costa Rica’s new leader criticizes predecesso­r

Vows to tackle high cost of living, crime

- JAVIER CORDOBA

SAN JOSE, COSTA RICA Rodrigo Chaves began a four-year term as Costa Rica’s president on Sunday, taking office with a lengthy list of reproaches for his predecesso­r and the country’s political class while promising great change.

Shortly after being given the ceremonial presidenti­al sash by outgoing President Carlos Alvarado Quesada, Chaves lashed out at the state of the nation he has been left to lead, complainin­g of the high cost of living, crime, drug traffickin­g and long lines at social security offices.

“Not only are we going to put the house in order, we are going to rebuild it!” he vowed. “This is the sign our times. It is the urgency for change that cannot be delayed, the cry of a democracy that we will not let disappear!”

He warned that “if the political class fails one more time, the country could fall apart.”

He dismissed the idea he said was held by many that the Central American nation is “ungovernab­le.”

The conservati­ve economist, who was briefly finance minister under Alvarado, had cast himself as the outsider in the race, noting that his Social Democratic Progress Party had never won at any level before this year.

Chaves may find governing difficult, however: His party has only 10 of 57 seats in the legislatur­e.

Chaves won despite being dogged by a scandal that drove him out of the World Bank, where he was accused of sexual harassment by multiple women, was eventually demoted and then resigned.

Chaves has denied the accusation­s.

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