The Mercury News

Ortega leads in vote tally after jailing rivals; U.S. decries results

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MANAGUA, NICARAGUA >> A day after questioned elections, Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega’s government on Monday set about painting as a historic democratic victory what many of the world’s democracie­s condemned as a sham.

Nicaragua’s Supreme Electoral Council said that with nearly all the ballots counted, Ortega had won more than 75% of the vote. The outcome was never in doubt after his government jailed seven of the leading potential opposition candidates, clearing the field for Ortega to sweep to a fourth consecutiv­e five-year term.

With all government institutio­ns firmly within Ortega’s grasp and the opposition exiled, jailed or in hiding, the 75-year-old leader eroded what hope remained the country could soon return to a democratic path. Instead, he appeared poised to test the internatio­nal community’s resolve and continue thumbing his nose at their targeted sanctions and statements of disapprova­l.

Ortega and Vice President and first lady Rosario Murillo were scheduled to celebrate in Managua’s Revolution Plaza later Monday.

The vote also determined 90 of the 92 seats in the congress and representa­tion in the Central American Parliament.

Murillo went so far as to call the elections “the first sovereign elections in Nicaragua’s history” and reported congratula­tions streaming in from Russia, Cuba, Venezuela and Bolivia.

The council put voter turnout at 65%, a figure not observed in lightly attended voting centers Sunday. Open Ballot Boxes, an opposition effort to observe the elections, said that its more than 1,450 monitors around the country estimated an average turnout of about 18%.

Murillo cheered the reported turnout, saying “more than 2 million votes we receive with infinite gratitude and commitment.”

But she and Ortega will be ruling a shrinking and more skeptical support base among a general population with rising demands to participat­e in Nicaragua’s politics.

Vanderbilt University’s Latin American Public Opinion Project polled 2,997 Nicaraguan­s between June and August as part of their Americas Barometer survey. The phone survey had a margin of error of plus or minus 1.79 percentage points. The full report on the survey is scheduled to be released later this month.

“In our survey in the summer of 2021, we were seeing signs of grave doubts in the integrity of elections in the country on the part of people in Nicaragua,” said project director Elizabeth Zechmeiste­r. “We asked whether or not they believe that votes are counted fairly in the country and what we found is that only 26% of people in Nicaragua believe that their votes are always counted correctly. Interestin­gly enough, it’s about the same percentage of people who expressed support for the incumbent administra­tion.”

The Ortega administra­tion has continued to close avenues for democratic participat­ion with police banning public protests, electoral authoritie­s banning some opposition political parties and potential candidates being arrested.

“We ask people whether or not they think one can bring about change in politics through elections, through street protests, through either or through neither,” Zechmeiste­r said. “And we’ve asked that question in the past. So we’re able to make comparison­s across time, and we see in 2021 a significan­t decrease in the percentage of people who think that it’s possible to bring about political change in the country through either elections or through street protests.”

María Acevedo waited at a bus stop in the capital Monday. She said the outcome of the election was clear in advance. “They had it all set up,” she said. “For me this is a fraud.”

Inside a Managua hair salon, Leticia Roa, said respecting the results would keep the peace.

“The people elected him (Ortega) and you have to respect it,” she said. “So what is there to do? Respect.”

What remains to be seen is whether the internatio­nal community will continue to unite to push Ortega to change course.

 ?? MOISES CASTILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Nicaraguan citizen protests against President Daniel Ortega at Constituti­on Square in Guatemala City on Sunday.
MOISES CASTILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Nicaraguan citizen protests against President Daniel Ortega at Constituti­on Square in Guatemala City on Sunday.

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