Tag Archives: paraguay

Paraguay the Day After

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By Raul Ayala Diarte

With the images from Paraguay’s national elections this past Sunday fresh in our eyes – elections in which businessman Horacio Cartes of the Colorado Party rose to a clear victory by a wide margin – any doubts about the electoral and democratic process in Paraguay have been cleared. The country has now repeatedly held transparent electoral processes since the fall of the dictatorship in 1989.

Nearly 70 percent of the voting population participated in this election – one of the highest percentages in history – to elect a president, vice president, senators, deputies, governors and state boards, and parliamentarians for the Southern Common Market (Mercosur). The election was classified as exemplary by international observers from more than 12 organizations, among them the Organization of American States, the European Union, the Union of South American Nations, the Carter Center, and by the local and international press. What is more important is that the candidates accepted the results and there were no incidences to feed the morbid fascination of those that were anticipating problems in the electoral system.

These elections are historic because the world – and particularly the countries of Latin America – were watching everything with critical eyes. They are historic because for the first time we had an election where the Colorado Party (which was hegemonic for 60 years) was running as the opposition and retook power by winning the majority of seats in play (i.e. Senators, Deputies, and Governors) while the Liberal Party, the current governing party, could not even retain the seats it took in 2008.

The traditional parties that dominate Paraguayan politics, the Colorado Party and the Authentic Radical Liberal Party (PLRA), took more than 80 percent of all votes: Colorado taking 45.8 percent and PLRA 36.94 percent.

The coalition of parties of former President Fernando Lugo obtained 3.32 percent of the votes, amounting to 79,327 voters, which contributes to a better understanding of why Paraguayan society did not defend him during the impeachment trial that cost him the presidency in June 2012. Lugo has lost almost all of his support, as the figures demonstrate, although the coalition got better results in the Senate elections, obtaining five of the 45 seats available.

The Precursor

Like never before in its history, Paraguay became politically isolated by the majority of its South American neighbors. The cause of this isolation, as we know, was the impeachment via political trial of former President Lugo, which the majority of jurists and citizens in our country believe was carried out in the letter and spirit of our Constitution.

Nevertheless, for various leaders in the region motivated by political and ideological interests  – as Uruguayan President José Mújica openly recognized – the impeachment was seen as illegal and as a result caused a rupture in Paraguayan democracy.

Because of this “political” interpretation, regional organizations sanctioned and suspended Paraguay’s participation in key international organizations. The “only way” in which Paraguay could be reintegrated into regional institutions is through the clean election conducted on April 21st. It is important for Paraguay to maintain good relations with its neighboring countries since without international cooperation its landlocked location does not give it many other options for development. The electoral system certainly requires profound reforms to grant more equality to the candidates, but this electoral process played out without any major complications.

In Paraguay, the electoral processes have been characterized by a lack of concrete policy proposals. Nevertheless, this election was different due to civil society’s contribution in helping expand the proposals, perhaps not to the level of a well structured governing plan, but enough to qualify as a substantial improvement in content. To understand this better, it is important to highlight that in the 2008 elections where Fernando Lugo won, a government plan did not exist and the campaign relied on just six core themes. Six months after assuming office, Lugo himself created what was called Cerrito I, which was a plan for a better structured government.

To counter this trend and contribute to the electoral process and an informed vote, the Foundation for Development in Democracy (DENDE) and CERNECO – civil society organizations supported by CIPE, organized candidate debates broadcasted by all the open television channels in the country. The purpose was to allow Paraguayan citizens the opportunity to hear and contrast the candidates’ proposals on the issues that matter to them the most. This event was an innovation in the country, and perhaps the region, where all the television stations in the country – private, public, open, and cable – and more than 500 radio stations broadcasted the debates on March 17 and March 24.

According to estimates, over 3 million people from all over the country observed the debate and according to surveys, 71 percent of these people saw and heard the candidates’ proposals for the first time, demonstrating that the debate reached every corner of the country.

The success of this debate can be attributed to the fact that the four leading candidates all participated. This contrasts with what has happened in other countries in which candidates leading in the polls avoid debates, as is the case of Cristina Kirchner in Argentina and Nicolas Maduro in Venezuela.

What awaits the future government?

The new government will face multiple challenges as well as high expectations and necessary compromises.

With regards to the economy, the priority will be to utilize the country’s favorable natural resource advantages and the ability to produce food to feed 60 million people, an amount 10 times greater than the current population. It is also a priority to establish an industrialization process to generate employment, as well as to control the fiscal deficit.

Other pending topics include:

  • The fight against poverty and inequality
  • The fight against corruption, nepotism, the patronage system, and the quality of politics
  • Making institutions function so that they provide guarantees to citizens

An additional challenge will be to continue to eliminate practices carried down from the previous dictatorial government.

“When the people speak, politicians remain silent.” This phrase summarizes the respect given to popular will as it is reflected in the ballot boxes. ∎

This article originally appeared in Spanish on www.RevistaPerspectiva.com

Raul Ayala Diarte is the executive director of the Foundation for Development in Democracy (DENDE).

Paraguay’s First Presidential Debate a Milestone for Latin America

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On Sunday night, CIPE partner Democracy in Development (DENDE) pulled off a victory for democracy in Paraguay that surpassed their own expectations: the first true presidential debate in the country.

Not only did all four leading presidential candidates participate, the debate was broadcast over the six principal television networks in the country, as well as on 150 commercial radio stations and more than 500 community radio stations. No debate on this scale has happened before in Paraguay, and probably not in all of Latin America.

DENDE was not alone in pulling off this event. Its principal partner in country was the Center for Regulations, Norms and Studies of Communication (CERNECO). The event has been a year and a half in the making and was preceded by series of grassroots organizing events in forums for the business, social and political sectors of the country. Through these forums and the citizen surveys that DENDE conducted, a policy framework was developed to guide the political, economic, and social priorities for the country and which helped steer the debates.

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A Private Sector Vision for Paraguay

Several months ago, Paraguay embarked on an historic change of power to elect Fernando Lugo to become president of the country. The election marked the end of 60 years of rule by the Colorado Party and renewed the hopes of the Paraguayan people that real change might bring them the jobs and prosperity that they had hoped to gain from their democratic transition.

This week, another historic event occurred in Paraguay when the largest gathering of business leaders ever seen in the country came together to create a private sector vision for Paraguay’s future. Over 600 business leaders met in Asunción as well as the leaders of over 55 business associations to debate key reform topics and reach consensus on the most important points. This vision will soon be consolidated and published and presented to the incoming Lugo government.

Hopes are that President-elect Lugo will implement the kinds of changes that the country needs to catch up with growth experienced in other parts of the hemisphere. However, there are forces at work that could delay or derail that process. Groups from the far left have been staging kidnappings and private property occupations to force the government’s hand toward a more left leaning agenda. In addition, the president elect has chosen to meet with the presidents of Bolivia and Venezuela on his second day in office. While this is not an optimistic signal about the kinds of friend Mr. Lugo intends to keep, he has chosen strong ministers for leading the economy at the outset of his administration. He has also cultivated relations with the presidents of Brazil and Chile, who represent a more moderate and successful vision from the center left.

It remains to be seen what direction President-elect Lugo will finally take, but he will do well to pay ample attention to the groundbreaking work now being conducted by the private sector on its own initiative.

Is Paraguay Waking Up?

The upcoming presidential elections on April 20 in Paraguay present what may come to be viewed as a turning point in Paraguayan democracy. Paraguay was a latecomer to the club of democracies in the region, having only just established it with the adoption of their 1992 constitution. Before and since that day, the national political process has been dominated by the Colorado Party and its more than five decade lock on presidential politics.

That may now be changing. The current frontrunner in the polls is Fernando Lugo, a former bishop whose party platform expresses the populist politics reminiscent of Hugo Chávez of Venezuela, Evo Morales of Bolivia and Rafael Correa of Ecuador. Other contenders are former General Lino Oviedo who formally tried to oust a democratically elected government, and Blanca Ovelar, who is the Colorado Party candidate. All and all, this presents complicated choices for Paraguayan voters, especially given that the person who many think represents the freshest voice in politics, Pedro Fadul, is running in an impossibly distant fourth place.

In my recent trip to Paraguay, I discovered that despite lead of Lugo in the polls, most people felt that the Colorado Party political machine would likely make Blanca Ovelar the winner in the election. Does this mean politics as usual in Paraguay? I would say “no” to that. Many people appeared tired of the political “model” that the country has fallen into and want change. In the business community, an unprecedented number of political debates are being sponsored between presidential candidates and more emphasis is being put on what each candidate will actually offer in a political and economic platform for setting the country in another direction. There is certainly plenty to be done. As a recent article in Ultima Hora, a daily newspaper, pointed out, Paraguay ranks 109th out of 115 countries on their respect for property rights, a key ingredient for a successful market economy.

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