Honduras set for woman president as leftist Castro storms towards
victory
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[November 29, 2021]
By Gustavo Palencia and David Alire Garcia
TEGUCIGALPA (Reuters) - Honduran
presidential candidate Xiomara Castro headed for a landslide win in
Sunday's election, declaring victory as supporters danced outside her
offices to celebrate the left's return to power 12 years after her
husband was ousted in a coup.
The election, set to give Honduras its first female president, seemed to
have run smoothly, a contrast to four years ago when a close outcome led
to a contested result and deadly protests after widespread allegations
of irregularities.
With half the ballots counted, Castro, the wife of former President
Manuel Zelaya, held a nearly 20-point lead over Nasry Asfura, the
capital's mayor and ruling National Party hopeful, who won 34% according
to a preliminary tally on Monday.
Jubilant celebrations broke out at Castro's campaign headquarters as the
vote count poured in and her lead held up. The offices of Asfura's
ruling conservative National Party were deserted.
A self-proclaimed democratic socialist in a country where few women hold
public office, Castro won support of a broad swathe of Hondurans tired
of corruption and the concentration of power that grew under the
National Party.
"We have turned back authoritarianism," she told supporters late on
Sunday, surrounded by her Libre Party faithful, aides and family,
including her husband Zelaya, who was ousted when business and military
elites allied against him, ushering in a dozen years of National Party
rule.
"PEACE AND JUSTICE"
Depending on her policy choices, Castro could reverse a weakening of the
Honduran justice system that has benefited corrupt and criminal groups,
a trend seen across Central America in recent years.
She has promised to enlist help from the United Nations to strengthen
the fight against corruption. She vows to legalize abortion in some
cases. She may establish diplomatic ties with Beijing, an issue of
concern to Washington.
Business leaders quickly offered congratulations and Castro promised to
work "hand in hand" with the private sector.
"We're going to form a government of reconciliation, a government of
peace and justice," Castro added.
However, critics have painted her as a dangerous radical, recalling
Zelaya's closeness to late Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez.
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Xiomara Castro, presidential candidate of the Liberty and
Refoundation Party (LIBRE), gives a statement after the closing of
the general election in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, November 28, 2021. At
left is vice presidential candidate Salvador Nasrala. REUTERS/Jose
Cabezas
In her speech, Castro vowed to strengthen direct
democracy by holding referendums on key policies. Elsewhere in Latin
America, that tool has sometimes in fact strengthened presidential
power.
A planned referendum by Zelaya on constitutional reform including
allowing a president to be re-elected for a second term was a
catalyst for the coup against him, with elites uncomfortable about
his alliance with Chavez.
Despite such resistance to re-election, a top court packed with
current President Juan Orlando Hernandez's allies later changed the
constitution to allow him a second term.
Early on Monday, Castro thanked Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro
on Twitter for a message congratulating her.
The election took place against a backdrop of poverty exacerbated by
the coronavirus pandemic, adding to anger fueled by scandals that
helped pushed record numbers of migrants to leave for the United
States.
Castro, who had run twice before for the presidency, seized on the
unpopularity of outgoing Hernandez, who has been implicated in a
drug trafficking case in a U.S. federal court.
Hernandez has repeatedly denied wrongdoing, but his party's
candidate Asfura was at pains to keep his distance from the
president during the election campaign. Castro's husband Zelaya was
also implicated by a witness in a U.S. court of having taken a drug
bribe. He denied the accusation.
Asfura urged voters to show patience in a social media post, but
stopped short of conceding.
The fate of Honduras' 128-member Congress remained in the air with
no preliminary results published by the electoral council. If the
National Party can keep control, it could complicate life for a
Castro administration.
(Reporting by Gustavo Palencia and David Alire Garcia; Editing by
Frank Jack Daniel, William Maclean)
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