Los Angeles Times

Turning to Twitter to protect an election

Fearing democracy is at risk, Guatemalan­s take to social media to dispute claims of fraud in presidenti­al vote.

- By Leila Miller

MEXICO CITY — As their presidenti­al election hangs in the balance, Guatemalan­s are taking to social media to try to circumvent what they see as interferen­ce and a threat to democracy.

After an anticorrup­tion candidate stunned with a second-place finish last month and advanced to the August runoff, Guatemala’s Constituti­onal Court on Saturday ordered the election results suspended and reviewed.

The court’s move has raised cries from internatio­nal observers as well as Guatemalan­s over election meddling. The second-place candidate, Bernardo Arévalo of the Semilla party, said in an interview that the move is a desperate attempt by the conservati­ve establishm­ent to maintain control: “It’s the modus operandi of a co-opted state.”

So now, in a country where leaders have eroded democracy, voters are taking matters into their own hands to safeguard the election results.

Supporters of Arévalo’s party are posting certified election results from their voting tables on social media, after downloadin­g scanned PDFs from a government website. The PDF forms show how people voted at each table.

Hundreds if not thousands of forms containing election results have been posted, with the hashtag #NoHuboFrau­de — #ThereWasn’tFraud — becoming a trend on Twitter. Besides raising awareness, by downloadin­g the forms, citizens can confirm firsthand that the votes at their polling table were tallied correctly.

“I did it as an act to make my vote count, to show that there wasn’t fraud,” said Andrea Yanes, a 24-year-old internatio­nal relations student at Rafael Landivar University in Guatemala City who posted her form on Twitter and has helped friends and relatives download the scanned forms.

Edgar Ortiz Romero, a constituti­onal law expert at Istmo University just outside Guatemala City, said the social media movement has turned into “an exercise of publicity to defend our system.”

“It’s surprised me a lot that people are doing this,” he said. “I think it’s because a narrative of fraud has never gone so far before.”

Samuel Pérez, a 30-yearold party leader of Semilla — or Seed — said the trend took off after a party effort to combat claims of voter fraud. Before the Constituti­onal Court suspended the election results, Pérez noticed that social media accounts were circulatin­g a picture of a form that contained errors, using it to accuse Semilla of fraud. Pérez instructed party representa­tives to publish images of other, accurate, forms.

The presidenti­al election was marked by low turnout, and about a quarter of ballots were left blank or nullified, which can happen when a ballot is deliberate­ly defaced. Courts had blocked several people from running, including a leftist Indigenous candidate and a popular political-outsider businessma­n.

In the crowded election, Arévalo got 11.7% of the vote, and Sandra Torres, a former first lady backed by conservati­ves, received 15.8%. The third-place finisher received 7.8%.

The Organizati­on of American States and the European Union, which monitored the race, did not report major issues on election day. The OAS, urging that “the will of the people expressed at the polls be respected,” said it would send election monitors back to Guatemala for the review.

The U.S. State Department said it is “deeply concerned by efforts that interfere with the June 25 election result.” A powerful Indigenous Guatemalan group has threatened to hold mass protests.

Democracy and rule of law have been under attack in Guatemala for years.

The most significan­t blow came in 2019, when then-President Jimmy Morales expelled a United Nations-backed anticorrup­tion commission after it began investigat­ing him over illegal campaign financing. Anticorrup­tion prosecutor­s and independen­t judges have fled the country under his successor, President Alejandro Giammattei. The attorney general in 2021 fired the country’s top anticorrup­tion prosecutor, drawing sanctions from the U.S.

Human rights groups have also decried attacks against journalist­s. A major Guatemalan newspaper closed in May after its staff faced criminal investigat­ions it has called revenge for its corruption investigat­ions. (The founder, renowned journalist José Rubén Zamora, has been sentenced to six years in prison in a money-laundering case he says is fabricated.)

What would become the Semilla party began as a small group of intellectu­als meeting to discuss what they saw as the country’s troublesom­e state of democracy. When a corruption scandal triggered mass protests that forced President Otto Pérez Molina to resign in 2015, the group decided to form a party. It coalesced around social democratic ideals and aimed to combat corruption, said Samuel Pérez.

Semilla’s first pick for a presidenti­al candidate, Thelma Aldana, wasn’t allowed on the 2019 ballot. The Constituti­onal Court barred the former attorney general from running after she faced corruption charges — a move that human rights groups called payback for her office’s anticorrup­tion work, which included the prosecutio­n of Pérez Molina.

This year, the party backed Arévalo, 64, the son of a literature professor considered Guatemala’s first democratic­ally elected president, who won in 1944 after protests ousted a military dictator. Arévalo, who has a sociology degree, has served as vice minister of foreign affairs and ambassador to Spain, and spent years doing work for the organizati­on Interpeace.

In 2020, he became a congressma­n for Semilla, which has developed a detailed government plan to expand social services but presents fighting corruption as the most urgent problem. Arévalo has said that he’d bring back prosecutor­s and judges who have fled Guatemala under persecutio­n from the conservati­ve-run judicial system.

Arévalo said Semilla’s success in the most recent election reflects Guatemalan­s’ weariness.

“We were able to capitalize on the frustratio­n, on the tiredness of a population that doesn’t want to keep living a corruption disaster,” he said.

Another factor, according to Will Freeman, a fellow for Latin American studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, is that “so many establishm­ent parties fighting for power” helped Semilla.

“Their votes are so concentrat­ed in these urban centers where maybe people are more tuned in to the type of pro-transparen­cy, pro-reform politics they’ve been trying to build,” he said.

Several days after the election, 10 parties solicited an injunction with the Constituti­onal Court, saying there were problems with the count. The court ordered citizen volunteer committees that certified vote results to hear complaints and cross-check tallies.

Torres — a runner-up in two presidenti­al elections who was arrested in 2019 on campaign finance charges before a judge threw out the case — has said that she asked for the injunction “for protection.”

“If the records are good, if the numbers are good, then nothing happens,” she told reporters in a news conference. “The only thing we want is to give legitimacy to the process.”

Arévalo has called it a ploy by the other parties to overturn the results. The elections also included races to choose lawmakers, and Semilla more than tripled its congressio­nal seats. “They are about to lose control,” he said.

Oritz Romero, the constituti­onal law expert, said the review is an “unnecessar­y process” that may erode confidence in the electoral system. It’s unclear, he said, how long it could take to reach a resolution.

For now, Semilla is rallying its base. More than 15,000 people have signed up in the last few days to volunteer for the party, said Pérez.

Among the volunteers is David Ortiz, 32, who works at an art gallery in Guatemala City.

Ortiz decided to vote for Semilla after Arévalo showed up one day last spring at the gallery and the two began chatting about artists. Ortiz likes the party’s anticorrup­tion rhetoric and its promise to bring back attorneys and judges who have fled the country.

He was furious when the election results were suspended. After seeing that friends were posting the certified voting forms on Instagram, he went online to download the form that correspond­ed to his voting area. Ortiz posted the photo on Twitter, writing that “there weren’t any alteration­s, nor correction­s, nor FRAUD.”

“It was really an act against the corruption, against those who have always governed to say that ‘you yourselves put this system in place for us to consult,’ ” he said. “We’re not going to stay silent.”

 ?? Moises Castillo Associated Press ?? AFTER an anticorrup­tion candidate advanced to the presidenti­al runoff, Guatemala’s Constituti­onal Court ordered the election results reviewed. Above, election officials review records in Guatemala City on Tuesday.
Moises Castillo Associated Press AFTER an anticorrup­tion candidate advanced to the presidenti­al runoff, Guatemala’s Constituti­onal Court ordered the election results reviewed. Above, election officials review records in Guatemala City on Tuesday.

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