Corruption is Everywhere and Definitely in El Salvador
Can the new president clean up a moral cesspool?
Supporters of the Grand National Alliance for Unity cheer for their presidential candidate Nayib Bukele in San Salvador, El Salvador, on Sunday. Bukele, a former mayor of El Salvador's capital, has ended a quarter century of two-party dominance in the crime-plagued Central American nation. (Moises Castillo/Associated Press)
A former mayor campaigning on an anti-corruption ticket swept to victory in El Salvador's presidential election on Sunday, bringing an end to a two-party system that has held sway over the violence-plagued Central American country for three decades.
Nayib Bukele, the 37-year-old former mayor of the capital, San Salvador, won 54 per cent of votes with returns counted from 44 per cent of polling stations. His two rivals from mainstream political parties conceded defeat.
Bukele won more votes than all other candidates combined in his first-round sweep, highlighting deep voter frustration over the failure of the two main parties to tackle violence and corruption.
"This day is historic for our country. This day El Salvador destroyed the two-party system," Bukele told hundreds of Salvadorans who danced, waved flags and blew whistles in a San Salvador plaza that Bukele revitalized when he was mayor from 2015 to 2018.
Must contend with Trump's threats
His two rivals from the mainstream political parties conceded defeat.
Bukele must now contend with U.S. President Donald Trump's frequent threats to cut aid to El Salvador — as well as neighbouring Guatemala and Honduras — if they do not do more to curb migration to the United States.
At home, supporters hope that a third-party politician will usher in changes to improve a sluggish economy and widespread poverty.
"Let's see if he can do what he's promised for us," said a jubilant supporter, Baltazar Sanchez, 30, at Bukele's victory speech.
"After 30 years of two parties, we've been dealt the best hand."
Bukele and his wife Gabriela gesture at a polling station while voting in the presidential election in San Salvador,
El Salvador, on Sunday. (Moises Castillo/Associated Press)
Gang violence has made El Salvador one of the world's most murderous countries in the past few years, driving Salvadorans to flee to the north.
'Yes, we did it!'
Among his campaign promises, Bukele, an avid social media user who snapped a selfie with supporters before declaring his win, said he would push infrastructure projects to limit such migration.
Since the end of its civil war in 1992, El Salvador has been governed by the ruling leftist Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN) and its rival, conservative Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA).
Though he describes himself as from the left and was expelled from the FMLN, Bukele has formed a coalition including a right-wing party that together has just 11 seats in the legislature.
Outside of the hotel in San Salvador where Bukele waited for the results, a group of supporters set off fireworks, beat drums and danced as early figures came in.
"Yes, we did it! Yes, we did it!" they chanted.
'The corrupt can't hide'
FMLN candidate Hugo Martinez conceded defeat shortly after Bukele's victory speech while ARENA candidate Carlos Calleja said he recognized the election results and would call Bukele to offer congratulations.
Definitive results would be announced within two days, Olivo said.
Polling officials count ballots shortly after voting ended during Sunday's presidential election.
(Salvador Melendez/Associated Press)
Besides challenges on the international stage, once Bukele takes office in June, he will face a sluggish economy and rampant poverty.
Along with the goal of modernizing government, Bukele, who is set to take office in June, has proposed creating an international anti-corruption commission with the support of the United Nations, following similar committees in Guatemala and Honduras.
"We'll create a [commission] ... so that the corrupt can't hide where they always hide, instead they'll have to give back what they stole," Bukele said in January.
'A dictator is a dictator'
Growing up, Bukele's relatively wealthy family was sympathetic to the FMLN, the former leftist guerrilla army that became a political party at the end of the civil war.
But Bukele has turned away from Latin America's traditional left, branding Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro and Nicaragua's Daniel Ortega as well as conservative Honduran Juan Orlando Hernandez as dictators.
"A dictator is a dictator, on the 'right' or the 'left'," Bukele wrote last week on Twitter.
He will need much help and much prayer if he is to overcome the social malaise that is El Salvador.
No comments:
Post a Comment