Latin America

Left poised to reclaim power in Honduras after 2009 coup

Latin America’s election-packed “Super November” came to an end yesterday with a resounding victory for the left in Honduras, which will reclaim power for the first time since the 2009 coup against former President Manuel Zelaya.

Mr. Zelaya’s wife Xiomara Castro won 54 percent of the vote, comfortably beating government-backed candidate Nasry Asfura and erasing most fears of a contentious post-election scenario like Honduras saw in 2017, when outgoing right-wing President Juan Orlando Hernández was accused of fraud, leading to dozens of deaths in street protests.

Although both candidates initially said they were confident of winning immediately after polls closed and Mr. Asfura has yet to concede, the conservative candidate did send a moderate message on Twitter later in the afternoon, calling for “patience, peace, and calm” until “all the votes are counted across the country.”

Only 51 percent of the votes have been uploaded to Honduras’ election monitoring system so far, but third-party candidates such as Yani Rosenthal have also declared Ms. Castro the winner.

“We won,” Ms. Castro told a jubilant crowd last night, as her victory trend already seemed irreversible. “Twelve years of resistance have not been in vain because today the people have manifested their will. We have overcome authoritarianism and we have overcome continuísmo,” she said, referring to allegations that the conservative National Party attempted to perpetuate itself in power by way of constitutional revision.

Since the ousting of...

Ignacio Portes

Ignacio Portes is The Brazilian Report's Latin America editor. Based in Buenos Aires, he has covered politics, macro, markets and diplomacy for the Financial Times, Al Jazeera, and the Buenos Aires Herald.

Recent Posts

The Brazilian Report shortlisted for four Digiday Media Awards

Other finalists include the Harvard Business Review, Fortune, Condé Nast, and the NFL

3 hours ago

Explaining Brazil #291: Lula’s farming feuds

The relationship between farmers and the Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva administration is by no…

1 day ago

The legacy of Ayrton Senna, 30 years on

Pelé, Ronaldo, Zico, Marta … All of Brazil’s truly immortal sporting icons are footballers, that…

1 day ago

Brazil and Paraguay deadlocked over Itaipu dam

Speaking before a Senate hearing on Tuesday, Chief of Staff Rui Costa admitted that Brazil…

2 days ago

Brazil’s job market remains strong despite unemployment uptick

New job market data from the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE) show the…

2 days ago

Brazil wants to know more about its domestic workers

Brazil officially had 5.83 million domestic workers in 2022 — almost the entire population of…

2 days ago