Ecuador's conservative incumbent and a leftist lawyer advance to
presidential runoff
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[February 10, 2025]
By REGINA GARCIA CANO
GUAYAQUIL, Ecuador (AP) — Ecuador will choose its next president in a
runoff election after conservative incumbent Daniel Noboa and leftist
lawyer Luisa González garnered enough votes Sunday to beat 14 other
candidates.
The contest, set for April 13, will be a repeat of the October 2023 snap
election that earned Noboa a 16-month presidency.
Noboa and González are now vying for a full four-year term, promising
voters to reduce the widespread criminal activity that upended their
lives four years ago.
The spike in violence across the South American country is tied to the
trafficking of cocaine produced in neighboring Colombia and Peru. So
many voters have become crime victims that their personal and collective
losses were a determining factor in deciding whether a third president
in four years could turn Ecuador around or if Noboa deserved more time
in office.
Noboa, an heir to a fortune built on the banana trade, and González, the
protégée of Ecuador’s most influential president this century, were the
clear front-runners ahead of the election.
Figures released by Ecuador’s National Electoral Council showed that
with 80% of ballots tallied, Noboa received more than 3.71 million
votes, or 44.43%, while González earned over 3.69 million votes, or
44.17%. The 14 other candidates in the race were far behind them.
Voting is mandatory in Ecuador. Electoral authorities reported that more
than 83% of the roughly 13.7 million eligible voters cast ballots.
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Crime, gangs and extortion
Under Noboa’s watch, the homicide rate dropped from 46.18 per 100,000
people in 2023 to 38.76 per 100,000 people last year. Still, it remained
far higher than the 6.85 per 100,000 people in 2019, and other crimes,
such as kidnapping and extortion, have skyrocketed, making people
fearful of leaving their homes.
“For me, this president is disastrous,” said Marta Barres, 35, who went
to the voting center with her three teenage children. “Can he change
things in four more years? No. He hasn’t done anything.”
Barres, who must pay $25 a month to a local gang to avoid harassment or
worse, said she supported González because she believes she can reduce
crime across the board and improve the economy.
Noboa defeated González in the October 2023 runoff of a snap election
that was triggered by the decision of then-President Guillermo Lasso to
dissolve the National Assembly and shorten his own mandate as a result.
Noboa and González, a mentee of former President Rafael Correa, had only
served short stints as lawmakers before launching their presidential
campaigns that year.
To win outright Sunday, a candidate needed 50% of the vote or at least
40% with a 10-point lead over the closest challenger.
More than 100,000 police officers and members of the military were
deployed across the country to safeguard the election, including at
voting centers. At least 50 officers accompanied Noboa, his wife and
their 2-year-old son to a voting center where the president cast his
ballot in the small Pacific coast community of Olón.
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Ecuador's President Daniel Noboa, running for re-election, waves
after accompanying his running mate, Maria Jose Pinto, to cast her
ballot during the presidential elections in Quito, Ecuador, Sunday,
Feb. 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Carlos Noriega)
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Testing the limits of laws and norms of governing
Noboa, 37, opened an event organizing company when he was 18 and then
joined his father’s Noboa Corp., where he held management positions in
the shipping, logistics and commercial areas. His political career began
in 2021, when he won a seat in the National Assembly and chaired its
Economic Development Commission.
As president over the past 15 months, some of his mano dura, or
heavy-handed, tactics to reduce crime have come under scrutiny inside
and outside the country for testing the limits of laws and norms of
governing.
His questioned tactics include the state of internal armed conflict he
declared in January 2024 in order to mobilize the military in places
where organized crime has taken hold, as well as last year’s approval of
a police raid on Mexico’s embassy in the capital, Quito, to arrest
former Vice President Jorge Glas, a convicted criminal and fugitive who
had been living there for months.
His head-on approach, however, is also earning him votes.
“Noboa is the only person hitting organized crime hard,” retiree German
Rizzo, who voted to get the president reelected, said outside a polling
station in Samborondón, an upper-class area with gated communities
separated from the port city of Guayaquil by a river.
‘Things are not going to change’
González, 47, held various government jobs during the presidency of
Correa, who led Ecuador from 2007 through 2017 with free-spending
socially conservative policies and grew increasingly authoritarian in
his last years as president. He was sentenced to prison in absentia in
2020 in a corruption scandal.
González was a lawmaker from 2021 until May 2023, when Lasso dissolved
the National Assembly. She was unknown to most voters until Correa’s
party picked her as its presidential candidate for the snap election.
Quito’s University of the Americas professor Maria Cristina Bayas said
Sunday's result was “a triumph” for Correa's party because pre-election
polls projected a wider difference between Noboa and González.
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Esteban Ron, dean of the Faculty of Social and Legal Sciences at the
International University SEK in Quito, said Noboa will be forced to
reengineer his campaign at the risk that he may have already reached his
vote ceiling. Ron attributed the outcome to the problems Noboa faced
during his administration.
Waiting for her turn to vote in Guayaquil, architecture student Keila
Torres said she had not yet decided who to vote for. None, she said,
will be able to lower crime across Ecuador due to deep-rooted government
corruption.
“If I could, I wouldn’t be here,” said Torres, who witnessed three
robberies in public buses over the past four years and barely escaped a
carjacking in December. “Things are not going to change.”
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