The Korea Times

Costa Rica votes in ex-minister as president

- SAN JOSE (AFP)

— Costa Rica on Sunday voted for a former minister from the center-left ruling party as its next president, rejecting his rival, an ultra-conservati­ve preacher who had campaigned strongly against gay marriage.

Carlos Alvarado, a former labor minister under current President Luis Guillermo Solis, who was barred from seeking a second term, won a convincing 60.7 percent of the ballots in the run-off, electoral authoritie­s said, based on returns from more than 90 percent of polling stations.

“There is much more that unites us than divides us,” he told a cheering crowd in his victory speech, congratula­ting the defeated candidate.

“My duty is to unite this republic, to take it forward, so it is a leading republic of the 21st century,” he said.

The right-wing preacher, Farbicio Alvarado (no relation), garnered 39.3 percent. He quickly conceded defeat to a crowd of disappoint­ed supporters, thanked God, and congratula­ted Carlos Alvarado on his triumph.

“We have not won the election, but we can accept this result with our heads held high,” he said.

Costa Rica, a small Central American nation of five million people, had been polarized ahead of the run-off election.

Fabricio Alvarado had surged from obscurity to lead a field of 13 candidates in the first round in February by vociferous­ly slamming moves to recognize same-sex marriage.

That stance tapped into widespread social conservati­sm in the country, particular­ly in poorer rural areas, and the preacher was also buoyed by support from evangelica­l churches that have proliferat­ed in recent decades.

Carlos Alvarado, in contrast, had offered a more traditiona­l campaign highlighti­ng several issues — boosting education, reducing the growing deficit, enhancing environmen­tal protection­s — while incarnatin­g continuity with the outgoing leader.

Pre-election surveys had suggested a neck-and-neck race. But in the end, the result was a clear and resounding win for Carlos Alvarado.

He will take power next month, for a four-year term.

Aged 38, Carlos Alvarado is also a writer, with three published novels, who has a taste for rock music dating back to his university days as a singer in a progressiv­e rock band called Dramatika. He counts Pink Floyd as one of his favorite groups.

 ?? Reuters-Yonhap ?? Fabricio Alvarado Munoz, presidenti­al candidate of the National Restoratio­n Party (PRN), carries his daughter as he greets supporters after Costa Rica’s presidenti­al election in San Jose, Costa Rica, Sunday.
Reuters-Yonhap Fabricio Alvarado Munoz, presidenti­al candidate of the National Restoratio­n Party (PRN), carries his daughter as he greets supporters after Costa Rica’s presidenti­al election in San Jose, Costa Rica, Sunday.

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