The Morning Call

Salvadoran front-runner seeks to end corruption, violence, gangs

- By Marcos Aleman

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — A former mayor of El Salvador’s capital was making a strong run Sunday to end a quarter century of two-party dominance in the crime-plagued Central American nation.

Polls ahead of Sunday’s vote put Nayib Bukele ahead of the Nationalis­t Republican Alliance’s Carlos Callejas and former Foreign Minister Hugo Martinez of the Farabundo Marti National Liberation

Front, as well as a minor-party candidate.

But he could fall short of the 50 percent needed to avoid a March runoff.

All four candidates promised to end corruption, stamp out gang violence and create more jobs, with crushing crime at the top of the agenda. Roughly 67,000 Salvadoran­s belong to gangs that terrorize their communitie­s with extortion, murder and other forms of violence.

The candidates have proposed creating economic opportunit­ies and restoring social values to dissuade Salvadoran­s from engaging in criminal behavior. Turnout appeared to be heavy in early voting, with no reports of major problems.

Bukele, 37, made his political debut in 2012 as a small-town mayor with the now-ruling Front, known as the FMLN, and won election in the capital three years later, automatica­lly making him a potential presidenti­al contender. But his frequent criticism of the leftist party’s leadership led to his expulsion, and he wound up as the unlikely standardbe­arer of a small conservati­ve party known as the Grand Alliance for National Unity, whose initials — GANA— mean “win” in Spanish.

Bukele took to social media Sunday to urge Salvadoran­s to vote. “Let’s save our country a second run” at the polls, he said. Speaking to reporters after casting his own vote, he lashed out against his opponents’ political parties, calling them “corrupt.”

The FMLN and the conservati­ve Alliance, known as ARENA, have dominated Salvadoran politics since a 1992 peace deal that ended a brutal civil war. But both parties have been stained by corruption scandals and neither has been able to stem gang violence.

“I came to vote because I want the country to change, because we are tired of so much corruption,” said Estela Henriquez, 27, at a polling place in the capital.

More than 4,500 election observers, including representa­tives of the Organizati­on of American States and the European Union, were on hand.

El Salvador is small both in size and population, with just 6.5 million people. Close to a third of its households live in poverty.

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