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Ecuador’s presidential election goes to runoff between conservative incumbent, leftist lawyer

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  • Ecuador will choose its next president in a runoff election in April between conservative incumbent Daniel Noboa and leftist lawyer Luisa González.
  • Crime is a major issue for voters. The trafficking of cocaine produced in neighboring Colombia and Peru has contributed to skyrocketing rates of homicide, kidnapping and extortion.
  • Ecuador’s National Electoral Council said that with 92.1% of the ballots counted, Noboa received 44.31% of the voite, while González received 43.83%. The 14 other candidates in the race were far behind them.

Ecuador will choose its next president in a runoff election in April between conservative incumbent Daniel Noboa and leftist lawyer Luisa González.

Neither won outright in Sunday’s first-round election, but they were both well ahead of the other 14 candidates and each within a percentage point of garnering 44% of the vote, according to results Monday.

The run-off election set for April 13 will be a repeat of the October 2023 snap election that earned Noboa a 16-month presidency.

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Noboa and González are now vying for a full four-year term, promising voters to reduce the widespread criminal activity that upended their lives four years ago.

The spike in violence across the South American country is tied to the trafficking of cocaine produced in neighboring Colombia and Peru. So many voters have become crime victims that their personal and collective losses were a determining factor in deciding whether a third president in four years could turn Ecuador around or if Noboa deserved more time in office.

Noboa, an heir to a fortune built on the banana trade, and González, the protégée of Ecuador’s most influential president this century, were the clear front-runners ahead of the election.

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Ecuador’s President Daniel Noboa, running for re-election, waves after accompanying his running mate, Maria Jose Pinto, to cast her ballot during the presidential elections in Quito, Ecuador, on Feb. 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Carlos Noriega)

Figures released by Ecuador’s National Electoral Council showed that with 92.1% of the ballots counted, Noboa received 4.22 million votes, or 44.31%, while González received 4.17 million votes, or 43.83%. The 14 other candidates in the race were far behind them.

Voting is mandatory in Ecuador. Electoral authorities reported that more than 83% of the roughly 13.7 million eligible voters cast ballots.

Crime, gangs and extortion

Under Noboa’s watch, the homicide rate dropped from 46.18 per 100,000 people in 2023 to 38.76 per 100,000 people last year. Still, it remains far higher than the 6.85 per 100,000 people in 2019, and other crimes, such as kidnapping and extortion, have skyrocketed, making people fearful of leaving their homes.

«For me, this president is disastrous,» said Marta Barres, 35, who went to the voting center with her three teenage children. «Can he change things in four more years? No. He hasn’t done anything.»

Barres, who must pay $25 a month to a local gang to avoid harassment or worse, said she supported González because she believes she can reduce crime across the board and improve the economy.

Noboa defeated González in the October 2023 runoff of a snap election that was triggered by the decision of then-President Guillermo Lasso to dissolve the National Assembly and shorten his own mandate as a result. Noboa and González, a mentee of former President Rafael Correa, had only served short stints as lawmakers before launching their presidential campaigns that year.

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To win outright Sunday, a candidate needed 50% of the vote or at least 40% with a 10-point lead over the closest challenger.

More than 100,000 police officers and members of the military were deployed across the country to safeguard the election, including at voting centers. At least 50 officers accompanied Noboa, his wife and their 2-year-old son to a voting center where the president cast his ballot in the small Pacific coast community of Olón.

Testing the limits of laws and norms of governing

Noboa, 37, opened an event organizing company when he was 18 and then joined his father’s Noboa Corp., where he held management positions in the shipping, logistics and commercial areas. His political career began in 2021, when he won a seat in the National Assembly and chaired its Economic Development Commission.

As president over the past 15 months, some of his mano dura, or heavy-handed, tactics to reduce crime have come under scrutiny inside and outside the country for testing the limits of laws and norms of governing.

Luisa Gonzalez is running for president in Ecuador against Daniel Noboa.

Luisa Gonzalez, presidential candidate for the Citizen Revolution Movement, speaks after polls closed for the presidential election in Quito, Ecuador, on Feb. 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Carlos Noriega)

His questioned tactics include the state of internal armed conflict he declared in January 2024 in order to mobilize the military in places where organized crime has taken hold, as well as last year’s approval of a police raid on Mexico’s embassy in the capital, Quito, to arrest former Vice President Jorge Glas, a convicted criminal and fugitive who had been living there for months.

His head-on approach, however, is also earning him votes.

«Noboa is the only person hitting organized crime hard,» retiree German Rizzo, who voted to get the president re-elected, said outside a polling station in Samborondón, an upper-class area with gated communities separated from the port city of Guayaquil by a river.

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‘Things are not going to change’

González, 47, held various government jobs during the presidency of Correa, who led Ecuador from 2007 through 2017 with free-spending socially conservative policies and grew increasingly authoritarian in his last years as president. He was sentenced to prison in absentia in 2020 in a corruption scandal.

González was a lawmaker from 2021 until May 2023, when Lasso dissolved the National Assembly. She was unknown to most voters until Correa’s party picked her as its presidential candidate for the snap election.

Quito’s University of the Americas professor Maria Cristina Bayas said Sunday’s result was «a triumph» for Correa’s party because pre-election polls projected a wider difference between Noboa and González.

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Esteban Ron, dean of the Faculty of Social and Legal Sciences at the International University SEK in Quito, said Noboa will be forced to reengineer his campaign at the risk that he may have already reached his vote ceiling. Ron attributed the outcome to the problems Noboa faced during his administration.

Waiting for her turn to vote in Guayaquil, architecture student Keila Torres said she had not yet decided who to vote for. None, she said, will be able to lower crime across Ecuador due to deep-rooted government corruption.

«If I could, I wouldn’t be here,» said Torres, who witnessed three robberies in public buses over the past four years and barely escaped a carjacking in December. «Things are not going to change.»

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Estados Unidos: Donald Trump en la gran final del Super Bowl, un show para darse un baño de multitud y acrecentar su imagen

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El Super Bowl es, en muchos sentidos, la carne viva de la cultura estadounidense: millones de personas miran por televisión un combate cuerpo a cuerpo en el campo de batalla de hombres con historias de superación, donde gana el mejor, en un show repleto de ricos y famosos donde reina el consumismo de los comerciales de 30 segundos de 8 millones de dólares. Por eso no extrañó que haya sido el lugar que Donald Trump eligió para estar el domingo por la noche. No iba a perderse el espectáculo más grande del mundo.

Fue el primer presidente en ejercicio de la historia de Estados Unidos en presenciar la gran final de fútbol americano. Y, más allá de las circunstancias del juego, el Super Bowl se convirtió anoche en una especie de Trump show, donde el magnate fue protagonista y buscó acrecentar su imagen.

El domingo temprano Trump jugó en su casa de Mar a Lago al golf con Tiger Woods, luego dio una entrevista con Fox y más tarde voló hasta Nueva Orleans para presenciar la final entre los Chiefs de Kansas City y los Eagles de Filadelfia.

Si bien su corazón estaba con los Chiefs (la esposa del quarterback Patrick Mahomes es fan declarada del presidente), antes de partir dijo que viajaba al partido para alentar a “dos grandes equipos” que representan “lo mejor del sueño americano”: trabajo duro, dedicación, tenacidad y la inspiración para miles de atletas jóvenes.

Dijo además que el fútbol americano brinda “una sensación de unidad nacional, uniendo a las familias, amigos y fans juntos para fortalecer las comunidades”. Pero su espíritu festivo y benévolo duró apenas unas horas: cuando los Chiefs perdieron por paliza (40 a 22) lanzó un tuit venenoso: “La única que tuvo una noche peor que los Kansas City Chiefs fue Taylor Swift. Ella recibió un abucheo en el estadio. Los MAGA no perdonan!”, azuzó a la cantante pop, novia del jugador multicampeón de Kansas Travis Kelce.

El presidente Donald Trump observa la primera mitad del partido de fútbol americano Super Bowl 59 de la NFL entre los Kansas City Chiefs y los Philadelphia Eagles. Foto AP

Trump pisó el estadio y entró al campo de juego a saludar a algunos de los futbolistas y participó de una ceremonia de conmemoración de las víctimas del reciente atentado terrorista en Nueva Orleans. Luego se ubicó en el palco preferencial, rodeado de familiares y flanqueado por su hija Ivanka.

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Los lugares VIP estaban repletos de famosos: Taylor Swift, Paul McCartney, Adam Sandler, Kevin Costner, Bradley Cooper, Lady Gaga, Cardi B, Jay Z, Louis Tomlinson, Serena Williams, Zac Efron, Anne Hathaway, Jessica Alba y otros.

Con perfil más bajo, en otro palco se ubicó la ex primera dama Jill Biden, confesa admiradora de los Eagles, con Hunter Biden, el hijo del ex presidente que no estuvo en la cita.

Los lugares VIP estaban repletos de famosos: Taylor Swift, Paul McCartney, Adam Sandler, Kevin Costner, Bradley Cooper, Lady Gaga, Cardi B, Jay Z, Louis Tomlinson, Serena Williams, Zac Efron, Anne Hathaway, Jessica Alba y otros. Foto APLos lugares VIP estaban repletos de famosos: Taylor Swift, Paul McCartney, Adam Sandler, Kevin Costner, Bradley Cooper, Lady Gaga, Cardi B, Jay Z, Louis Tomlinson, Serena Williams, Zac Efron, Anne Hathaway, Jessica Alba y otros. Foto AP

En un momento, cuando interpretaban el Himno Nacional, las cámaras enfocaron por un breve instante a Trump en el palco, haciendo la venia y mirando a la multitud. Entonces se escuchó una ovación, aunque también algunos pocos abucheos, según dijo el pool de prensa de la Casa Blanca que lo acompañaba.

En otro momento, cuando el partido estaba avanzado y los Chiefs iban perdiendo, las cámaras se posaron en Taylor Swift y se escuchó un abucheo, mientras ella miraba con cara sorprendida. Y tenía motivos: cuando el equipo de su novio jugó otras finales en los años anteriores (salieron campeones 2 veces consecutivas) ella era aplaudida por todo el estadio. Pero en los últimos tiempos se convirtió en blanco de las críticas de Trump, sobre todo desde que ella apoyó a la demócrata Kamala Harris en la última campaña electoral.

En su viaje de regreso desde New Orleans, Trump se entretuvo reposteando varios videos en sus redes con los abucheos a Taylor y las ovaciones a su persona. A pesar de la derrota de su equipo favorito, volvía contento. Su avidez de omnipresencia lo había llevado al lugar justo en el momento justo.

Trump disfruta. En su anterior presidencia, en la ola de las protestas por el crimen del afroamericano George Floyd por parte de un policía blanco, el futbolista Colin Kaepernick se arrodilló durante el himno y encabezó un movimiento en la Liga Nacional de Fútbol americano que enfureció a Trump. Los tiempos ahora cambiaron. Esta vez se volvió con un sabor mucho más dulce.

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