Los Angeles Times

Ecuador’s democracy is on the brink

President’s disbanding of the National Assembly bodes ill for a country wracked by crime and power struggles.

- By Will Freeman Will Freeman is a fellow for Latin America studies at the Council on Foreign Relations.

ECUADOR’S PRESIDENT, Guillermo Lasso, dissolved its legislatur­e Wednesday to dodge an impeachmen­t vote he appeared bound to lose. He invoked a previously untested constituti­onal provision known as “muerte cruzada,” or “mutual death,” which permits the president to send lawmakers packing and rule by decree while facing new elections within 90 days.

Lasso claimed to be defending not just himself but the country’s democracy, saying: “This is a democratic decision, not only because it is constituti­onal but because it returns the power to the Ecuadorean people.” But that argument wilts under scrutiny.

Confrontin­g a power-hungry opposition, Lasso opted to push his presidenti­al powers to their limits — or beyond. The constituti­on permits muerte cruzada only under select conditions that may not have been met.

It’s not clear this was in Ecuador’s best interests. Shutting down the assembly is likely to stoke instabilit­y and, paradoxica­lly, empower Lasso’s sworn enemies: Rafael Correa, the strongman who was president for a decade until 2017, and his left-wing populist party.

Even before the crisis, Ecuador had been battered by an unpreceden­ted surge in violent crime and increasing emigration. Lasso’s move portends more difficulty for one of the region’s most vulnerable democracie­s.

Make no mistake, the impeachmen­t process was unscrupulo­us. The opposition, led by Correa’s party and disaffecte­d conservati­ves, accused the president of tolerating corruption but provided scant evidence directly implicatin­g him. This was the second time the opposition tried to oust Lasso, a probusines­s conservati­ve elected in 2021.

Lasso chalked it up to an attempt to destabiliz­e his government. About that, he was at least partly right.

Still, few expected him to survive the impeachmen­t vote. With little previous government experience, Lasso failed to curb skyrocketi­ng crime or pervasive poverty and hunger. His government undertook perilously little public spending even as it sat on unpreceden­ted reserves as oil prices climbed. Worse, Lasso indulged in tirades against opponents more befitting of his populist opponents. Nostalgia for Correa, who governed with an even if authoritar­ian hand, is growing.

With his removal from office likely, Lasso’s decision to disband the assembly was politicall­y rational but democratic­ally perilous for a few reasons.

First, Lasso risks sapping state institutio­ns of their already scant legitimacy. When popular presidents rule by decree, it can be dangerous; when unpopular ones do, they court disaster.

Lasso advanced to the runoff that made him president with less than 20% of the vote and narrowly claimed victory thanks to the begrudging support of center and center-left voters willing to overlook his conservati­sm to avoid a return of Correa’s illiberal populism. But he has since alienated those constituen­cies while failing to satisfy his conservati­ve base. His only major legislatio­n was a tax reform that exacted a heavy toll on the middle class.

Meanwhile, scandals have rocked his government. High-level associates accused of corruption and links to organized crime have become fugitives and turned up dead.

Lasso’s approval rating recently sank below 14%. Nonetheles­s, moments after the shuttering of the assembly, a Lasso minister told journalist­s his government would push through a lightning round of executive decrees.

Ecuador’s powerful Indigenous lobby vowed to protest if Lasso makes muscular use of his unilateral powers. Instead of a period of strong government, the country faces more executive weakness as challenges metastasiz­e.

Moreover, Lasso’s legislativ­e shutdown could well empower Correa. During his rule, the former populist president reduced inequality but also harassed and spied on the press and opposition while accumulati­ng more foreign debt. And the country shifted away from the United States and toward China, Russia and Iran.

By the time Correa left office in 2017, the country had also drifted away from democracy. His successors have to some degree reversed that, but Ecuador remains a flawed democracy.

The problem with Correismo is not its economic leftism or social conservati­sm, both of which have moderated over time. It’s the party’s tendency to concentrat­e and cling to power. Correa did not leave office quietly, trying unsuccessf­ully to install a pliant successor. Since 2020, he has taken up residence in Belgium to dodge a corruption conviction and hatch troubling plans for his party’s return to power.

Although Correa’s party is the largest in the assembly, he urged Lasso to disband it for months, anticipati­ng — with good reason — that early elections would favor him. When Lasso did so, Correa openly celebrated.

Finally, the more energy Ecuador’s politician­s spend on political battles, the less they have to take on organized crime. Ecuador’s homicide rate last year surpassed Mexico’s. Drug-fueled assassinat­ions, kidnapping­s and car bombs are becoming disturbing­ly commonplac­e in the once-peaceful country.

The current political crisis further diminishes hope for progress toward a stabler Ecuador. Lasso’s decree powers are unlikely to help given his underwhelm­ing record and limited support.

When the impeachmen­t drama started, Ecuador was facing an array of bad options. Unfortunat­ely, Lasso may have chosen the worst of them.

 ?? DOLORES OCHOA Associated Press ?? SOLDIERS GUARD the National Assembly in Quito, Ecuador.
DOLORES OCHOA Associated Press SOLDIERS GUARD the National Assembly in Quito, Ecuador.

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