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Bolivian voters hope for change after 20 years of socialism

August 18, 2025 / 10:23 AM
Bolivian voters hope for change after 20 years of socialism
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Sharjah 24 – AFP: Polls closed in Bolivia's most suspenseful general election in two decades on Sunday, in which the right is tipped to win power after nearly 20 years in opposition.

Ballot counting got underway after eight hours of voting for president and for both houses of parliament, held against the backdrop of a generational economic crisis.

The Andean nation's ailing economy has seen annual inflation hit almost 25 percent with critical shortages of fuel and dollars, the currency in which most Bolivians keep their savings.

Pre-election polls showed voters poised to swing right, 20 years after Evo Morales was elected the nation's first Indigenous president on a radical anti-capitalist platform.

"The left has done us a lot of harm. I want change for the country," said Miriam Escobar, a 60-year-old pensioner, who was the first to vote at a school in southern La Paz.

Center-right business tycoon Samuel Doria Medina and right-wing ex-president Jorge "Tuto" Quiroga are the favorites to succeed Morales's successor, Luis Arce, who is not seeking re-election.

Day that will mark history

The main left-wing candidate, Senate leader Andronico Rodriguez, who was disavowed by his former mentor Morales, failed to make his mark on the campaign.

A run-off will take place on October 19 if no candidate wins an outright majority.

The two frontrunners have vowed to shake up Bolivia's big-state economic model and international alliances if elected.

"This is a day that will mark the history of Bolivia," Quiroga said after voting in La Paz in a white shirt and black jacket.

Doria Medina, who also voted in La Paz, expressed confidence that the country of 11.3 million could "emerge from this economic crisis peacefully, democratically."

Both men want to slash public spending, open the country to foreign investment and boost ties with the United States, which were downgraded under the combative Morales, a self-described anti-capitalist who resigned from office in 2019 following mass protests over alleged election rigging.

Agustin Quispe, a 51-year-old miner, branded the pair "dinosaurs" and said he would back center-right candidate Rodrigo Paz, who has campaigned on fighting corruption.

Shock therapy

Emanuel Arratia, a 31-year-old graphic designer, said he believed Bolivia needed the kind of shock therapy administered by President Javier Milei to turn around his country's inflation-wracked economy.

"What people are looking for now, beyond a shift from left to right, is a return to stability," Daniela Osorio Michel, a Bolivian political scientist at the German Institute for Global and Area Studies, told AFP.

Doria Medina and Quiroga, both on their fourth run for president, have touted their experience in business and politics as qualifying them for the tall task of saving Bolivia from bankruptcy.

Doria Medina, a millionaire, built Bolivia's biggest skyscraper and owns the local Burger King fast food franchise.

Quiroga served as vice-president under ex-dictator Hugo Banzer and then briefly as president when Banzer stepped down to fight cancer in 2001.

Morales looms large

Morales, who was barred from standing for a fourth term, has cast a long shadow over the campaign.

The 65-year-old has called on his rural Indigenous supporters to spoil their ballots in protest at his exclusion.

Voting in his central Cochambamba stronghold, he slammed "an election without the people," of whom he claims to be the sole representative.

Several Indigenous voters told AFP they would spoil their ballots because they did not feel represented by any of the candidates.

Bolivia enjoyed more than a decade of strong growth and Indigenous upliftment under Morales, who nationalized the gas sector and ploughed the proceeds into social programs that halved extreme poverty.

But underinvestment in exploration has caused gas revenues to implode, falling from a peak of $6.1 billion in 2013 to $1.6 billion last year.

With the country's other major resource, lithium, still underground, the government has nearly run out of the foreign exchange needed to import fuel, wheat and other key commodities.

August 18, 2025 / 10:23 AM

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