Analysis: Bolivia vote suggests pandemic may fuel populism in Latin
America
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[October 21, 2020]
By Marcelo Rochabrun and Cassandra Garrison
LA PAZ/BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - A landslide
win by Bolivia's socialist party at weekend elections may herald a year
of dramatic shifts in Latin American politics as the painful economic
impact of the pandemic discredits incumbents and fuels demand for
change.
Bolivia's former economy minister Luis Arce won Sunday's vote in the
Andean nation, pledging to protect welfare spending as he takes over
next month from a conservative interim government.
"The pandemic has caused the Bolivian people to suffer and this
government did not know how to handle it," said Nicanor Baltazar, a
leader of Bolivia's largest workers group, the COB. "The people have
understood that."
With Latin America one of the hardest-hit regions in terms of COVID-19
deaths and impact on economic growth, analysts said the outcome in
Bolivia could mark a shift towards populism as more elections loom in
2021.
Voters will elect new presidents next year in Chile, Peru, Ecuador,
Honduras and Nicaragua, with major legislative votes also due in Mexico
and Argentina.
Even before the coronavirus struck, violent protests had rocked
countries including Chile and Colombia, fueled by anger over inequality
and political scandals.
With Latin America's $5.7 trillion regional economy forecast to contract
more than 9% this year and poverty indicators for its 650 million people
due to surge back to rates last seen in 2005, tensions are already
mounting.
The pandemic's economic fallout will leave Latin American governments
burdened by crippling deficits and facing angry demands from voters for
action on poverty and public services, said Benjamin Gedan, director of
the Wilson Center's Argentina Project in Washington.
"The pandemic's toll in Latin America is a godsend to outsiders and
populists, who will promise to repudiate debt, reject budget cuts and
fight corruption," said Gedan.
IMF BACKLASH
With several countries staggering under heavy debt burdens, a backlash
against the international financial system in the form of the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) is already underway.
In an interview with Reuters on Tuesday, Arce rebuffed the idea of an
IMF loan for Bolivia and vowed to dole out social payouts "as many times
as necessary."
In Costa Rica, one of the region's economic success stories, a proposed
IMF loan provoked days of violent demonstrations against the center-left
government of President Carlos Alvarado.
And in Ecuador, which will hold presidential elections in February,
unions will lead protests against an IMF deal on Thursday, commemorating
a wave of protests last year that forced conservative President Lenin
Moreno to abandon fuel subsidy cuts.
Would-be candidates for next year's election are jostling for position
by criticizing a loan deal Moreno struck with the IMF.
In Colombia, a national strike is planned for Wednesday, the latest in a
series of protests against the social and economic policies of
conservative President Ivan Duque.
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People participate in a demonstration called by Colombian indigenous
people to demand the government to protect their territories, stop
the assassinations of social leaders, and the implementation of a
peace agreement, at a meeting called "Minga" in Bogota, Colombia
October 19, 2020. REUTERS/Luisa Gonzalez/File Photo
In Chile, meanwhile, where protests flared at the weekend,
conservative President Sebastian Pinera has rolled back austerity
measures and will hold a referendum on Sunday on whether to rewrite
the constitution, a relic of Augusto Pinochet's 1973-1990 rule.
Claudia Navas, a Bogota-based analyst at Control Risks, said Arce's
emphatic win in Bolivia could provide a "key reference" for
left-wing opposition movements in Latin America, particularly in
Colombia and Ecuador where they were already gaining ground.
"Conditions are favorable for left-wing political parties to gain
more political spaces, if not the presidency," Navas said.
RISK OF A BACKWARD SLIDE
Yet incumbents of all political persuasions are at risk as anger
mounts at declining living standards. In Argentina, leftist
President Alberto Fernandez has seen his approval rating slide since
April, amid frustration at his handling of the pandemic.
In the region's biggest economies - Brazil and Mexico - populist
leaders were already the electoral beneficiaries of mounting
frustration at slow growth and rampant corruption before the
pandemic struck.
President Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil, a right-wing populist swept to
power in 2018, has preserved his popularity during the pandemic by
hiking welfare spending.
In Mexico, President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador - elected in 2018
amid outrage at graft - has eschewed large-scale government handouts
but managed to focus the debate away from his handling of the
pandemic and onto past corruption scandals.
Stephen Liston, senior director at the Washington office of the
Council of the Americas, warned that anger and mistrust of
governments as the economic crisis deepens could open the door wider
to populism or an authoritarian backlash in a region with a
troubling history of both.
"There is a real danger of a backward slide in democratic governance
in the region," he said.
(Reporting by Marcelo Rochabrun and Daniel Ramos in La Paz and
Cassandra Garrison in Buenos Aires; Writing by Adam Jourdan; Editing
by Daniel Flynn and Rosalba O'Brien)
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