Most Recent
Showing posts with label elections. Show all posts
Showing posts with label elections. Show all posts

Sanchez Ceren’s pick of Tharsis Solomon Lopez as Minister of Economy generates trust in the private sector in El Salvador.

Sanchez Ceren’s pick of businessman Tharsis Solomon Lopez as Minister of Economy generates trust in the private sector in El Salvador.

The arrival of businessman Tharsis Solomon Lopez as incoming Minister of the Economy has generated great expectations among analysts and business people, because they see it as a sign of building good working relations between the new government and the private sector.

The continuity of businessman Carlos Caceres as Finance Minister also generates trust from the entrepreneurial class in El Salvador.

Lopez, former vice president of the Salvadoran Association of Industrialists (ASI), one of the unions which together with the ANEP (National Association of Private Enterprises) made sharp criticism of the Funes Administration, now will have in their hands the relevant Ministry of Economy. And that, analysts say, is a plausible sign that Mr. Sanchez is trying to build a government of consensus to work shoulder to shoulder with the private sector in El Salvador.

FMLNUSA

TSE oficializa victoria del FMLN en elección presidencial

El magistrado presidente del Tribunal Supremo Electoral (TSE), Eugenio Chicas, confirmó a la fórmula presidencial del FMLN, Salvador Sánchez Cerén y Óscar Ortiz, como la ganadora de la elección del pasado domingo 9 de marzo.

“Declárese electo como Presidente de la República al señor Salvador Sánchez Cerén”, dijo el magistrado Chicas al leer la resolución en firme del escrutinio final, la noche de este domingo.

La lectura se da luego que la institución colegiada resolviera que los recursos de nulidad de elección presentados por ARENA no procedían, con lo que confirman que Sánchez Cerén y Ortiz son los electos para dirigir el órgano Ejecutivo durante el período 2014-2019.

Los resultados del pasado 9 de marzo indican que la fórmula del FMLN ganó con el 50.11% de los votos, contra un 49.89% obtenido por su rival del partido ARENA, Norman Quijano.

Sánchez Cerén y su compañero de fórmula, Óscar Ortiz obtuvieron 1,495,815 votos, contra el 1,489,451 votos de Quijano y René Portillo Cuadra.

El escrutinio final duró dos días y se dio luego de los resultados preliminares del domingo nueve en el que se evidenciaba la ventaja de 6,400 votos a favor del FMLN. Con los resultados en firme, la distancia entre ambas fuerzas es de 6,364.

La toma de posesión del presidente electo se realizará el próximo 1 de junio en una ceremonia en la que el presidente de la Asamblea Legislativa, Sigfrido Reyes, colocará la banda presidencial al actual vicepresidente.
 
Fuente: Transparencia Activa.

Sanchez Ceren and Mauricio Funes set up Transition Team in El Salvador

This Saturday's afternoon Salvador Sanchez Ceren revealed who will go to Presidential Palace on Monday to meet with transition team released by the President, Mauricio Funes, yesterday.

Among Sanches Ceren’s appointees are: Oscar Ortiz, Medardo Gonzalez, Siegfried Reyes, José Luis Merino, Manuel Melgar, Norma Guevara and Lorena Peña.

Furthermore, Ceren called small, medium and large businesses to join his government project. It is time to get to work, say the newly elected president.

Meanwhile, Funes appointed Secretary for Strategic Affairs and Education Minister Franzi Hato Hasbun, Technical Secretary, Alexander Segovia, Legal Secretary, Ricardo Marroquín, Minister of Finance, Carlos Caceres, Justice and Security, Ricardo Perdomo, and Defense, Gen. David Munguia Payes.

In this context, the president offered his full support for the work to be performed.

FMLN-USA

FMLN Promises an Inclusive Government in El Salvador

Salvadoran Presidential Election: Official Results Next Week, FMLN Promises an Inclusive Government
By: Linda Garrett

El Salvador's 2014 presidential election will be remembered for setting at least three historic precedents: the election of the first former guerrilla combatants as president and vice-president, the closest results in history, and ARENA's unparalleled surge of support between the first and second electoral rounds, which nearly returned their party to power.

Salvador Sánchez Cerén, the former guerrilla commander of the FMLN, won the first round on February 2nd by 10% over Norman Quijano, the ARENA candidate, who finished second, while former president Tony Saca, the UNIDAD candidate, placed a distant third. Because votes for Sánchez Cerén were just shy of the 50.1% required in the three-party race, a second round election had to take place on March 9th.

Eight polls conducted after the first round and released before the February 21st deadline required by law all indicated wide margins of victory for the FMLN. But as the votes came in Sunday evening, it was apparent that something extraordinary had happened in the month between the first and second rounds. With just over 6,300 votes separating the candidates, the FMLN was in the lead, but election officials announced it was too close to call. A final count of the tally sheets from over 10,000 urns began on Monday and was concluded just after midnight on March 13th, confirming the original FMLN lead.

Salvador Sánchez Cerén (left) and Oscar Ortíz (right), celebrate. Source: La Página

Final Count March 13, 2014. Source: TSE

Norman Quijano's call on election night for the Armed Forces (FAES) to intervene was an ominous reminder of the past and, at the same time, a sign of how far the country has come since the 1992 Peace Accords. The High Command, led by Minister of Defense General David Munguía Payés, expressed "concern" about the inflammatory statement. "Under no circumstances" could the FAES be "manipulated" for political purposes, he declared. The institution respects the elected government and is "loyal" to the President and Commander-in-Chief.

Meanwhile, ARENA refused to concede defeat and briefly walked out of the counting process, claiming fraud and bias on the part of the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE). ARENA party leaders demanded a total vote-by-vote recount and even annulment of the entire process and a new election. Following the announcement of the final count of tally sheets early Thursday morning, ARENA had 48 hours to file formal challenges with the Attorney General, then the Litigation Chamber of the Supreme Court, and if that fails, the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court.

On Thursday morning, two ARENA deputies presented alleged evidence of fraud to the Attorney General, who indicated his support for the official results. The United Nations, OAS,U.S. State Department and U.S. Embassy all expressed confidence in the process and in the professional, transparent work of election officials.

Warnings that El Salvador could be "another Venezuela" motivated ARENA supporters, who staged angry protests for the first three days following the election. Demonstrators banged pots and pans, carried signs ("No to fraud" and "SOS El Salvador") and shouted "¡Patria si, Comunismo No!" In Ilopango, ARENA Mayor Salvador Ruano led a demonstration that blocked a major intersection with burning tires. One FMLN supporter commented, "To the people who voted for ARENA out of fear, look what their party is doing, Venezolanizará the country!"



Norman Quijano speaks at ARENA rally, supporters hold "SOS El Salvador" signs. Source: Dario1

Not all ARENA leaders are in agreement about whether to continue the protest. Some, Roberto D'Aubuisson, Jr. for example, argue for Venezuela-style confrontations ("to the barricades!"), but there are those like Hugo Barrera, a party founder, who understand the necessity of negotiating with the FMLN: "Let's see how we can sit and develop a joint plan," Barrera said.

Mario Acosta Oertel, another historic ARENA leader, said the FMLN victory must be made "legitimate." The country was already divided, he said, "and today the division is even greater." International help will be required, he added, especially from the U.S., "that has a lot to say about this issue."

It is possible that Salvador Sanchez Cerén will not officially be "president-elect" until next week. The FMLN has been quietly victorious all week, avoiding "triumphal" activities but a celebration is planned for Saturday, March 15th. "We're ...filled with hope and joy," Sánchez Cerén said, promising an inclusive government that will be characterized by "dialogue, openness, cordiality and consensus."

The Right Reunited?

The surge in support for ARENA is unprecedented in El Salvador and was unanticipated, given its unique political circumstances. The right has been divided since the 2009 victory of Mauricio Funes and the FMLN; ARENA expelled former President Tony Saca (2004-2009) and consequently lost about a third of its legislators who formed a new "center right" party.

The 2014 ARENA campaign was mismanaged and the candidate's messages were often contradictory. Revelations of massive embezzlement by a former president in the final months of campaigning demoralized ARENA supporters, thousands of whom abstained from voting in the first round. But fear - of Venezuela, of the FMLN, of the past? - trumped disillusionment over the corruption scandal and lackluster campaign.

Within days of the February 2nd defeat, the party mobilized its structures and empowered local officials who had been largely ignored during the campaign season. Economic resources were found to get out the vote. One woman reportedly donated funds for 100 buses to transport voters. "Operation Hormiga" (ant) called on every ARENA member to recruit at least one new voter. The red, white and blue party flags began to appear on thousands of vehicles. The message was: ARENA is back, and only ARENA can save El Salvador from becoming "another Venezuela." Many party members had been dismayed by the corruption scandal, but were reinvigorated for battle at the polls.

The numbers tell the story:

FMLN First Round 1,315,768 (48.93%)
FMLN Second Round 1,495,815 (+180,047 votes)/ 50.11%

ARENA First Round 1,047,592 (38.95%)
ARENA Second Round 1,489,451 (+441,859 votes)/ 49.89%

UNIDAD First Round 307,603 (11.44%)
UNIDAD Second Round   n/a

ARENA captured the UNIDAD votes, unaffiliated voters and party members who abstained in the first round. This resurgence does not necessarily reflect allegiance to ARENA, but rather fear or rejection of the FMLN agenda.

The message for both parties, FMLN Minister of Public Works Gerson Martí­nez said, is "We have to reach understandings with each other." The party Secretary General Medardo González declared, "We won't end up embracing ARENA but we can walk together." And, "This is a very emotional moment," Deputy Lorena Peña admitted, "but also [a time] for much reflection."

Salvador Sánchez Cerén and Óscar Ortiz will be inaugurated on June 1st, but the FMLN will not have the broad mandate anticipated to advance its agenda. The right can either boycott and disrupt or cooperate toward consensus on the big fiscal, economic, and security issues facing the country. ARENA's posture during the Funes/FMLN has been to boycott, but it has been a political and economic boycott; the Venezuelan-style protests could portend a more contentious period ahead.

The unofficial president and vice-president-elect are both conciliators - the "tolerant left," as Sánchez Cerén has said. The former guerrilla commander was a signatory to the 1992 UN-brokered peace accords; if invited by both sides, international support may be required again to end the polarization that still plagues El Salvador.

Source: © 2014 Center for Democracy in the Americas. Al rights reserved.

Transparent Elections in El Salvador

El Salvador concludes an election considered transparent (ó El Salvador concludes a transparent election)

The Embassy of El Salvador in the United States reports that, after the run-off voting, held on March 9, 2014, the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE) concluded the official count, which showed the following results:

• FMLN : 50.11 % ( 1,495,815 votes)
ARENA : 49.89 % ( 1,489,451 votes)
Difference: 0.22 % ( 6,364 votes)
Disputed : 3,198 votes
Null : 19,579 votes

• A total of 3,008,043 Salvadorans casted their vote in the second round, while in the first round 2,741,074 people casted their votes. It is worth to mention that this situation is atypical, as in most runoff elections, the second round experiences a decrease rather than an increase in voting turnout.

• The 2014 presidential election has been a historic election for two reasons: first, it Salvadorans abroad were able to cast their vote, and is the election that has experienced the greater voting turnout.

With the provisional results, the TSE could not declare a new president-elect, since it can only do so after the final count. We hope that the TSE would declare a new president-elect in the next 48 hours, if no party submits resources.

The Ambassador of El Salvador to the United States, Ruben Zamora, highlighted the speed with which the results we publicly reported, both, the preliminary ones which were reported on the day of the election, and the final ones reported at the end of the official count. "This speaks highly of our system. Everything has been done under our legal framework and following the dictates of the Electoral Code. The provisional ballot was completed in less than six hours, the night of the election, and the final was completed within 43 hours, "said the diplomat.

"It is important to mention the presence of international observers who followed the electoral process thoroughly and who highlighted the transparency of the process," said Ambassador Zamora, who also mentioned the presence in the process of delegations from the United Nations (UN) and the Organization of American States (OAS), who issued a statements in which they described the process as reliable. Even the State Department of the United States‘ spokeswoman, Jean Psaki, acknowledged that international observers endorsed the Salvadoran elections, and made a call to complete the process peacefully.

The final count began on Tuesday March 11, 2014, when 23 tables began to review the 10,445 records. Each table consisted of: 4 members of every Departmental Electoral Board (2 per political party), 1 representative of each political party in contention, 1 delegate of the Attorney General's Office, 1 member of the Attorney’s office for the Defense of Human Rights (PDDH) and 1 member of the Board of Election Monitoring (JVE) of the contending parties.

Additionally, the official count was observed by four representatives of the Electoral Observation Mission of the Organization of American States (OAS), two of the European Union (EU) and the Embassy of the United States of America in El Salvador accredited four official who visited the counting tables.

The Embassy would like to clarify that the request for recounting every vote, made by one of the participating parties, is against Article 214 of the Electoral Code, which reads: "To the extent that the tribunal (TSE) receives the records and documents referred in previous article, it will proceed to the final count, in the manner it considers appropriate, taking as the sole the original closing records and the scrutiny of each of the polling stations. "

Moreover, the petition of the same party for the purposes of reviewing the challenged ballots also contradicts the Electoral Code, which establishes in Article 215 the following: "The court may only order the revision of ballots of one or more polling stations when the sum of the challenged ballots exceeds the outcome of the vote of the municipality or Department, so that they can to change the first outcome. "This time, the number of challenged votes (3,198 votes) is less than the difference between first and second place (6,364 votes).

We are convinced that this election represents a step forward in the institutionalization and consolidation of our representative democracy.

Source: El Salvador's Embassy in Washington, DC.

Subscribe

Stay Updated and Informed. FMLN USA

© 2013 FMLN USA. All rights reserved.
Designed by Momentos e Imagenes