New Era

Exiled Morales pulling Bolivian political strings

… as polls loom

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LA PAZ - From exile in Buenos Aires, former leftist president Evo Morales continues to influence Bolivian politics and is plotting his party’s return to power in September elections, analysts say.

Though banned from running in the poll and facing arrest if he returns, the 60-year-old - Bolivia’s first indigenous president - is mastermind­ing opposition to rightwing interim leader Jeanine Anez.

“At this time when Evo Morales is in exile, outside of power, he has become a kind of kingmaker,” political scientist Carlos Cordero told AFP.

Morales last year handpicked economist Luis Arce as the man who can win back the presidency for his Movement for Socialism (MAS) party.

To do so he faced down grassroots members who favoured former foreign minister David Choquehuan­ca or young cocagrower­s’ leader Andronico Rodriguez.

Arce, however, has slowly won over the doubters and is riding high in opinion polls, which if confirmed in the September 6 elections, would hand the presidency back to MAS a year after Morales’ tumultuous resignatio­n.

The polls give Arce 33% and centrist ex-president Carlos Mesa just over 18%, while Anez trails with nearly 17%.

Maria Teresa Zegada, a sociologis­t at the state-run Universida­d Mayor de San Simon, says Morales is a key player in the electoral campaign, despite his absence.

“I believe that he will continue to play an important role, as long as he continues to be a polarizing factor in the country’s politics. There are important sectors that support MAS and that is where Morales’ presence lies.” Ahead of the pandemic, the ex-president frequently convened meetings with MAS leaders in Argentina, but that direct communicat­ion has been frustrated by the pandemic lockdowns. These days he issues instructio­ns via social media.

“We will come back stronger and we will restore freedom and dignity to the Bolivian people,” said a message on his Twitter account.

Morales on Wednesday condemned what he said was an attempt by Anez to get the courts to outlaw his party and remove Arce from the electoral race. “The de facto government initiated a judicial strategy with political ends to disqualify our candidate and MAS and prevent us from participat­ing in the elections,” he tweeted.

Anez has accused Morales of conspiring to damage her electoral chances by sending overpriced Spanish ventilator­s for Covid-19 patients into the country as part of a relief operation during the pandemic. Zegada said Morales has benefited from the errors and scandals that have tainted his adversarie­s in power.

Morales fled the country after three weeks of protests over his controvers­ial re-election in October 2019 in a poll in which he was constituti­onally barred from participat­ing. He had tried to cling to power but lost the backing of the country’s military after an Organizati­on of American States audit found clear evidence of election fraud. He initially fled to Mexico, which sent a government plane to pick him up, before settling later in Argentina, home to a large Bolivian population.

Most of Morales’ cabinet fled with him, leaving behind a power vacuum in the bitterly divided country. Anez - a hitherto little known conservati­ve senator - assumed the presidency the following month.

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? Focal point… A woman sells face masks at an open market in La Paz.
Photo: Nampa/AFP Focal point… A woman sells face masks at an open market in La Paz.

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