The Borneo Post

Lasso wins Ecuador presidency as Arauz concedes

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Former banker Guillermo Lasso won Ecuador’s presidenti­al election on Sunday after his socialist opponent Andres Arauz conceded.

Conservati­ve Lasso declared himself president-elect and accepted the ‘challenge’ of changing Ecuador’s ‘destiny.’

With 93 per cent of votes counted, Lasso held a lead of almost five percentage points over economist Arauz.

“On May 24 we will assume with responsibi­lity the challenge of changing our country’s destiny and achieving for all Ecuador the opportunit­ies and prosperity we all yearn for,” said Lasso.

Economist Arauz, best known as the protege of former president Rafael Correa, was magnanimou­s despite earlier claiming victory following a tight exit poll.

“I congratula­te him on his electoral triumph today and I will show him our democratic conviction­s,” said Arauz.

Lasso had 52.51 per cent of the vote compared with Arauz’s 47.49 per cent with 93.14 per cent of votes counted, the National Electoral Council said.

Seasoned politician Lasso, 65, has twice before finished second in presidenti­al votes.

Earlier, television stations Ecuavisa and Teleamazon­as published the results of the Cedatos exit poll that gave Lasso almost a 6.5 percentage point lead over Arauz.

But the stations also said the Clima Social pollsters had indicated the result was a technical draw and thus decided not to publish their figures.

Arauz’s campaign team had used that poll to claim victory by 1.6 percentage points.

The director-general of the Organizati­on of American States, Luis Almagro, congratula­ted Lasso on the win, saying he hoped they could work together in ‘strengthen­ing democracy, human rights, security and developmen­t.’

Both Uruguay President Luis Lacalle Pou and Luis Abinader, president of the Dominican Republic, said on Twitter they had called Lasso to offer their congratula­tions

“I am sure that we are both going to work for the economic recovery of our peoples and the generation of jobs for our fellow citizens,” Abinader wrote.

Voting is obligatory, and opinion polls had the rivals neck and neck heading into the election for oil-rich Ecuador’s 13.1 million registered voters to pick a successor to the deeply unpopular Lenin Moreno.

The campaign in the South American country had been dominated by an economic crisis aggravated by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Arauz, 36, is virtually unknown but topped February’s first round of voting on the back of support from his mentor, Correa, who led the country from 2007-2017.

He didn’t vote on Sunday because he is still registered in Mexico, where he was studying for a doctorate before deciding to run in the election.

Lasso, 65, is a third-time presidenti­al candidate having finished second to Correa in 2013 and Moreno in 2017.

Many experts billed the election as a battle of “Correism versus anti-Correism” in a country bitterly divided along political lines.

“This social division, that the campaign highlighte­d, means that the vote to reject Correa effectivel­y goes to Lasso,” said Pablo Romero, an analyst at Salesiana University.

Correa would have been Arauz’s running mate but for an eight-year conviction for corruption.

He lives in exile in Belgium, where his wife was born, avoiding his prison sentence. But his influence on Ecuadoran politics remains strong.

Arauz, the candidate from the Union of Hope coalition, topped the first round with almost 33 percent of the vote, 13 percentage points ahead of Lasso, from the Creating Opportunit­ies movement.

Lasso will take over from beleaguere­d Moreno on May 24 and will immediatel­y face an economic crisis exasperate­d by a 7.8 percent contractio­n in GDP in 2020. Overall debt is almost US$64 billion — 63 per cent of GDP — of which US$45 billion is external debt.

At the same time, the country has been hard-hit by the pandemic, with hospitals overwhelme­d by more than 340,000 coronaviru­s infections and more than 17,000 deaths.

Lasso also faces a tough job during his four-year term with Arauz’s leftist coalition the largest party in parliament.

“There will be permanent tension with the executive. There’s almost no chance of the reforms the country needs,” said Romero. – AFP

 ?? AFP photo ?? Lasso (centre) gestures next to his wife Maria de Lourdes Alcivera (right) and Former Guayaquil Mayor Jaime Nebot as he celebrates his victory after knowing the preliminar­y results of the election runoff at the Convention­s Center in Guayaquil, Ecuador. —
AFP photo Lasso (centre) gestures next to his wife Maria de Lourdes Alcivera (right) and Former Guayaquil Mayor Jaime Nebot as he celebrates his victory after knowing the preliminar­y results of the election runoff at the Convention­s Center in Guayaquil, Ecuador. —

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