Yahoo – AFP,
December 17, 2016
La Paz (AFP) - Bolivia's ruling socialist party on Saturday defied the results of a February referendum and backed President Evo Morales for a fourth term in 2019.
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| Bolivia's President Evo Morales, seen in November 2016, has the backing of his ruling party to run for a fourth term in 2019, despite the results of a February referendum (AFP Photo/Aizar Raldes) |
La Paz (AFP) - Bolivia's ruling socialist party on Saturday defied the results of a February referendum and backed President Evo Morales for a fourth term in 2019.
The
Movement for Socialism (MAS) party, holding a congress in the eastern city of
Montero, approved the candidacy of Morales -- Bolivia's first president with an
indigenous background -- in a unanimous vote.
Morales
welcomed the party's decision, saying, "If the people decide it, Evo will
continue."
He added:
"So many times we have defeated the right."
Morales was
first elected president in 2005, and re-elected in 2009 and 2014.
But he
narrowly lost the referendum in February on the question of whether the
constitution should be revised to permit him to run again in 2019. His current
term expires on January 22, 2020.
The party
congress Saturday recommended "four legal alternatives" to allow his
candidacy within the constitutional framework, according to a union leader who
read the conclusions.
The first
was a partial constitutional reform through an initiative requiring the
signatures of some 20 percent of the electorate. Another also involves a
constitutional reform to allow an extended presidential mandate.
The third
recommends that the president renounce his office before the 2019 elections, so
that he would not have served three full terms, while the fourth involves a
reinterpretation of the constitution.
Morales,
who has cultivated an "everyman" image, has been highly popular
throughout most of his presidency.
He won his
first election with 54 percent of the vote, his second with 64 percent and his
third with 61 percent.
Morales has
generally benefited from a fragmented opposition.
At the time
of the February referendum, his popularity had been damaged by allegations that
he had fathered a child with a young woman, Gabriela Zapata, and done favors
for the Chinese company employing her.
He admitted
the two had had a son, who died in infancy, but emphatically denied the other
allegations.
Still, he
lost the referendum by a narrow margin, 51 percent to 49 percent, and vowed to
continue pressing the leftist platform that underlies his popularity.
As
president, he has worked to redistribute the nation's natural gas wealth and
provide a more inclusive environment for the indigenous majority.
To burnish
his common-man credentials, Morales has often traveled on foot or stopped to
play soccer with locals.
But some
Bolivians said they felt he had amassed too much power in his years in power,
and that the onetime outsider had himself joined the elite establishment.
In a survey
early this month, the Ipsos polling firm found Morales's popularity had slipped
a bit but was still relatively solid, at 49 percent.

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