Evo Morales
has been elected for a third term as Bolivia's president in a landslide victory
over his opponents. Morales's social welfare programs have made him wildly
popular among the country's poor and working classes.
Deutsche Welle, 13 Oct 2014
Morales
declared his victory in Sunday's presidential election a "triumph for
anti-imperialists and anti-colonialists," vowing to forge ahead with
socialist economic policies that have nationalized key industries and reduced
widespread poverty.
"We
are going to keep growing and we are going to continue the process of economic
liberation," Morales told supporters from the balcony of the presidential
palace in the national capital, La Paz.
The
two-term incumbent won more than 60 percent of the vote, according to
unofficial exit polls. His closest rival, businessman Samuel Doria Medina,
trailed with just 25 percent.
Populist
economic policies
Morales has
redistributed wealth from a natural gas boom into social welfare programs and
infrastructure projects, lifting half a million Bolivians out of poverty since
2006. The South American nation has grown by 5 percent annually and has
maintained fiscal surpluses.
A native
Aymara born in poverty, Morales is the first president from Bolivia's
Amerindian communities, which make up around 55 percent of the population. He
previously led a union for cacao growers, adding to his common man image.
"I
voted for Morales," said Flavia Nunez, a 50-year-old office clerk, in
central La Paz. "These other right-wing candidates would take us back in
time. I don't want that."
Monopoly on
power?
Critics
have accused Morales of monopolizing political power and undermining press
freedom by allowing allies to buy out critical media.
"There
is no functional opposition, left, right or otherwise," said Jim Shultz,
executive director of the left-leaning Democracy Center based in Bolivia and
San Francisco.
Although a
recent constitutional change limits the president to two terms, a court ruled
that Morales could run a third time, since his first term preceded the change.
"This
government has had two terms and I don't like it when a small clique lingers on
in power," said 53-year-old Miguel Angel Perez, an economist.
Morales has
been more controversial abroad, particularly in the United States. He has
sought to adopt a foreign policy independent from Washington, cultivating ties
with countries such as Cuba, Iran and Venezuela.
slk/crh (AP, AFP, Reuters)

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