A center-right senator and a right-wing former president are to advance to a run-off for Bolivia’s presidency after the first round of elections on Sunday, marking the end of two decades of leftist rule, preliminary official results showed.
Bolivian Senator Rodrigo Paz was the surprise front-runner, with 32.15 percent of the vote cast in an election dominated by a deep economic crisis, results published by the electoral commission showed.
He was followed by former Bolivian president Jorge “Tuto” Quiroga in second with 26.87 percent, according to results based on 92 percent of votes cast.
Photo: AFP
Millionaire businessman Samuel Doria Medina, who had been tipped to finish first, trailed in third with 19.86 percent, while the main leftist candidate, Bolivian Senate President Andronico Rodriguez, limped to a fourth-placed finish.
Doria Medina immediately threw his support behind Paz, as the leading opposition candidate.
Quiroga, who has vowed to overhaul Bolivia’s big-state economic model if elected, hailed the outcome as a victory for democracy and for “liberty.”
Paz, the son of former Bolivian president Jaime Paz Zamora who campaigned as a unifier, said the election was a vote for “change” and added that his program was “of all, for all.”
Gustavo Flores-Macias, a political scientist at Cornell University in New York, said Paz’s late surge showed people were “tired of the same candidates” repeatedly running for the top job.
Doria Medina and Quiroga had three previous failed bids to their names.
Flores-Macias also linked Paz’s success to a widespread disdain in Bolivia for candidates with links to big business.
The vote brings the curtain down on 20 years of socialist rule, which began in 2005 when Evo Morales, an indigenous coca farmer, was elected president on a radical anti-capitalist platform.
Bolivia enjoyed more than a decade of strong growth under Morales, who led the nation from 2006 to 2019, but underinvestment in exploration caused gas revenues — the country’s main earner — to implode, eroding the government’s foreign currency reserves, and leading to shortages of imported fuel and other basics.
“The left has done us a lot of harm. I want change for the country,” Miriam Escobar, a 60-year-old pensioner, said after voting in La Paz.
Quiroga served as vice president under former Bolivian dictator Hugo Banzer and then briefly as president when Banzer stepped down to fight cancer in 2001.
On his fourth run for president he vowed to slash public spending, open the country to foreign investment and boost ties with the US, which were downgraded under Morales.
However, some voters have balked at his promises of a “small state” and plans to dot the Andean high plains, which contain 30 percent of the world’s lithium deposits, with tax-free investment zones.
Agustin Quispe, a 51-year-old miner, branded him a “dinosaur” and said he voted for Paz as a “third way” candidate, who was not tainted by association with the traditional right or the socialists.
“What people are looking for now, beyond a shift from left to right, is a return to stability,” said Daniela Osorio Michel, a Bolivian political scientist at the German Institute for Global and Area Studies.
Morales, who was barred from standing for an unconstitutional fourth term, cast a long shadow over the campaign. Nearly one in five voters answered his call to spoil their ballot over his exclusion from the election, shrinking the left-wing vote.
Rodriguez, the main leftist candidate, whom Morales branded a “traitor” for contesting the election, was stoned while voting in Morales central Cochabamba stronghold.
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