Miami Herald (Sunday)

He’s not running, but Morales looms large in Bolivia vote

- BY CARLOS VALDEZ AND CHRISTOPHE­R TORCHIA

Even in exile, Evo Morales looms over Bolivia’s election next month.

National rifts that contribute­d to chaos in Bolivia in 2019 threaten to destabiliz­e the Oct. 18 vote and its aftermath nearly one year after Morales, Bolivia’s first Indigenous president from the Aymara group, was forced to resign following disputed vote results, protests, violence and a military call for him to go.

The country is divided mainly along ethnic, regional and socioecono­mic lines, and between those who applaud Morales as a voice for the historical­ly poor and disenfranc­hised and those who say he became increasing­ly corrupt and authoritar­ian during 14 years in power. The interim government that replaced him has also been accused of underminin­g Bolivia’s democratic institutio­ns, including the judiciary.

The feud has reverberat­ed outside the landlocked country of 12 million people, echoing ideologica­l divisions from an era when the political left and right in Latin America were more clearly defined.

In a speech to the virtual U.N. General Assembly on Wednesday, interim President Jeanine Anez accused neighborin­g Argentina, where Morales is in selfexile, of ?systematic and abusive harassment? of Bolivia’s institutio­ns and supporting a “violent conspiracy” led by the former president.

Argentina’s Foreign Ministry said it was regrettabl­e that Anez, who has withdrawn from the Bolivian election race, would try to involve Argentina in her country’s internal politics and urged her to focus energy on ensuring ?free and transparen­t? elections.

In a letter Tuesday to U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Sen. Bernie Sanders and 27 other members of the U.S. Congress expressed concern that the Organizati­on of American States, based in Washington, had been invited to monitor the Bolivian election. The letter alleged a “lack of accountabi­lity and transparen­cy” in an OAS audit that found evidence of fraud and other irregulari­ties in 2019 election results indicating Morales had won.

Morales, a 60-year-old former coca farmer and union leader, faces terrorism and other charges in Bolivia and is not an election candidate this year. Some human rights advocates believe the charges amount to political persecutio­n of Morales, who is basically in campaign mode, talking up his past administra­tion’s achievemen­ts.

The party that he founded, Movement for Socialism, also known by its Spanish acronym MAS, controls the congress and is a powerful election contender. Its presidenti­al candidate, Luis Arce, is a former economy minister who oversaw a nationaliz­ation program when Morales was president.

The other main candidates draw much of their support from Bolivia’s urban, more affluent population and should benefit from Anez’s withdrawal from the race. Carlos Mesa is a former president who ran in last year’s election against Morales, and Luis Fernando Camacho led protests against Morales and is strong in Santa Cruz, an eastern region that is Bolivia’s economic engine and a counterwei­ght to the political dominance of La Paz, in the west.

Several polls indicate the Movement for Socialism would lead in the round of voting next month, but struggle for the support needed to avoid a runoff pitting the top two candidates against each other. If there should be a runoff, MAS would come under more pressure if its opponents united.

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