Millionaire Cartes elected Paraguayan president

2013-04-23 15:40:30 

Millionaire businessman Horacio Cartes has won Sunday's Paraguayan presidential elections, bringing the once long-ruling Colorado Party to power again since it was defeated in 2008 after more than six decades in power.

Millionaire Cartes elected Paraguayan president

Paraguayan presidential candidate for the Colorado Party, Horacio Cartes, waves as he delivers a speech after winning the elections in Asuncion on April 21, 2013. [Photo: AFP]

Paraguay's top electoral body, the Supreme Court of Electoral Justice (TSJE), announced Sunday evening that Cartes had beat runner-up Efrain Alegre of the ruling Liberal Party by nearly 10 percentage points, after ballots at 75 percent of voting stations were tabulated.

Cartes garnered 45.93 percent of votes, while Alegre got 36.84 percent, the TSJE said.

About half an hour before the the TSJE was to announce the official results, Alegre conceded defeat, saying exit polls showed him trailing Cartes "by 5 to 7 points."

"Paraguayans have spoken," Alegre said, adding he considered the election process "suitable."

Cartes will take over the presidency from Liberal Party President Federico Franco, who as vice president rose to top power after former leftist President Fernando Lugo was ousted in June 2012.

Sunday's elections were the first since Lugo was ousted in a snap impeachment that took less than 48 hours.

His sudden removal by an overwhelmingly right-wing congress was considered a virtual coup by many of Paraguay's South American neighbors, and the country was suspended from regional trade bloc Mercosur for breaking democratic principles.

Despite 11 candidates running for the presidency, the presidential race was essentially between two conservatives after prominent leftist candidate Lino Oveido was killed when his helicopter crashed in February as his campaign was gaining momentum.

Cartes, 56, has promised to reform the corrupt ways of the Colorado Party and bring effective changes to a nation with 40 percent people in poverty.

Polling stations closed at 4 p.m. local time Sunday (2000 GMT) after a tranquil day of voting.

The head of an observer delegation from the Organization of American States (OAS), Oscar Arias, earlier described the election day as "very nice."

"It's turning into a very nice election day, everyone is out voting, there is a lot of calmness and the people are very tranquil, complying with the law since the polls opened," Arias told a Xinhua reporter while visiting a voting station in southeast Asuncion, Paraguay's capital.

The former Costa Rican president and Nobel Peace Prize-winner said the elections showed "Paraguay has made positive progress in recent years, as evident from the very normal way demonstrated in the electoral campaign, compared with other countries."

The last South American country to hold elections before Paraguay was Venezuela, where the death of former President Hugo Chavez led to a highly contested race whose outcome is still being disputed by the opposition.

"Remember that Paraguay is a young democracy," said Arias, adding that "I think the Supreme Court of Electoral Justice is a reliable agency and it should inspire calmness and confidence among the Paraguayan voters."

In the run-up to to Sunday's vote, several parties had questioned the new electronic ballot counting system that was used for the first time in Paraguay.

In addition to the OAS's 68-member delegation, other groups have also sent observer missions, including the European union   and two regional blocs, Unasur and Mercosur.

Paraguay's electoral body said shortly after polls closed Sunday that between 52 percent and 55 percent of the country's nearly 3.5 million eligible voters participated in the elections. By contrast, the 2008 elections that brought Lugo to power saw 65.48 percent participation.

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