Center-Right Candidate Wins in Uruguay, Ending 15 Years of Liberal Rule – The New York Times

Posted: December 5, 2019 at 1:50 pm

The presidential candidate of the center-left coalition that has governed Uruguay for 15 years conceded defeat on Thursday, four days after a close and contentious runoff election, as the nation joined others in the region in shifting rightward.

The concession ushers in Luis Lacalle Pou of the center-right National Party as the countrys new leader. It also spells an end to the tenure of the Broad Front, a coalition of leftist and center-left parties that oversaw the legalization of abortion, same-sex marriage and the sale of marijuana.

Mr. Lacalle Pous rival, Daniel Martnez of the Broad Front, conceded even as the vote count continued on Thursday. Mr. Martnez acknowledged on Twitter that the counting of provisional ballots would not modify the trend and said he would meet with Mr. Lacalle Pou on Friday.

Brazil, Chile, Bolivia and Colombia have also moved rightward to varying degrees, though Argentina recently elected a center-left president. Venezuelas leftist government is hanging on despite political and economic turmoil.

Mr. Lacalle Pou, 46, the son of a former president, has vowed to unite the nation of 3.4 million people after the tight vote, a sentiment conveyed in his Twitter message thanking Mr. Martnez.

After the polls closed on Sunday, Mr. Lacalle Pou expressed confidence he would come out victorious but vowed to wait for the final tally to call himself president-elect.

Almost half voted for one candidate, and the other half plus a little bit for another candidate, Mr. Lacalle Pou said. Todays result confirms that the next government cant change one half of the country for another. We must unite society. We must unite Uruguayans.

That language marked a change in approach for Mr. Lacalle Pou, said Mariana Pomis, executive director of Cifra, a local polling firm.

That was about recognizing that there is a large group of people who voted for the other side, Ms. Pomis said. It was a recognition that there is an important group of people who see reality in a different way.

Mr. Lacalle Pou did suggest Thursday that he would pursue a change in the countrys foreign policy, exchanging a friendly message on Twitter with Juan Guaid, Venezuelas opposition leader, who has proclaimed himself the countrys rightful leader.

Uruguay had been one of the few countries in the region that did not recognize Mr. Guaid over the embattled Venezuelan president, Nicols Maduro. Mr. Lacalle Pou vowed to change that during his campaign, and on Thursday he responded to a congratulatory message from Mr. Guaid by vowing to defend democracies and human rights.

Mr. Lacalle Pou won in the runoff election by drawing support from candidates who did not make it to the second round. He will now face the challenge of keeping them united despite their disparate ideologies, at a time when several countries in the region are mired in protests and economic malaise.

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Center-Right Candidate Wins in Uruguay, Ending 15 Years of Liberal Rule - The New York Times

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