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Ecuador’s incumbent President and a leftist lawyer again vie for the top job in election runoff Today World News

Ecuador’s incumbent President and a leftist lawyer again vie for the top job in election runoff Today World News

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Ecuadorians voted Sunday (April 13, 2025) in the country’s presidential election runoff, choosing in the tight race between incumbent President Daniel Noboa and leftist lawyer Luisa González.

Polls closed at 5 p.m. local time. Electoral authorities reported voter participation of more than 80% and planned to release initial results within two hours.

Mr. Noboa, a conservative young millionaire, and Ms. González both promised voters solutions to the extortions, killings, kidnappings and other crimes that became part of everyday life as the country emerged from the pandemic. Analysts expect the result of Sunday’s vote to have a very tight margin.

It was the second presidential runoff election in less than two years in the South American country, where voting is mandatory. Voters chose Mr. Noboa over Ms. González in the runoff of a snap election in October 2023.

The candidates advanced to Sunday’s contest after getting the most votes in February’s first-round election. Mr. Noboa won 44.17% of the votes while Ms. González garnered 44%. About 17,000 votes separated them.

Voters are primarily worried about the violence that transformed the country, starting in 2021 — a spike in crime tied to the trafficking of cocaine produced in neighboring Colombia and Peru.

Both candidates have promised tough-on-crime policies, better equipment for law enforcement and international help to fight drug cartels and local criminal groups.

“My vote is clear,” said Irene Valdez, a retiree who voted for Noboa. “I want to continue living in freedom.”

College student Martín Constante had a different view.

“I think Luisa is going to change things, because Mr. Noboa has been very authoritarian,” Constante, 19, said near a voting center in Quito, the capital. “Our country needs a lot of changes.”

More than 13 million people were eligible to vote, which is mandatory for adults up to the age of 65. It is optional for people aged 16 and 17 and over 65. Failure to vote results in a $46 fine.

Ecuador’s top electoral authority, Diana Atamaint, reported 83.7% of eligible voters had cast ballots. Meanwhile, law enforcement authorities reported that in polling areas 56 firearms were seized and more than 630 people, including individuals facing warrants for drug trafficking, homicide and nonpayment of child support, were arrested.

Atamaint said several people, including voters and poll workers, had been arrested over ballot anomalies. She said some cases involved double voting and others stemmed from reports of counterfeit, pre-marked ballots.

Atamaint added that 17 people were caught taking photos of their ballots, which the National Electoral Council banned for this election citing reports of voter coercion by criminal groups. The violation comes with a maximum fine of $32,000.

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Many Ecuadorians used their vote to express rejection of a candidate and not necessarily to endorse the candidate they voted for.

“Ecuador is polarized, which is a sign of rejection of the past, but also of the recent policies of the Noboa administration,” political analyst Oswaldo Landázuri said, adding that the expected tight result “could become a major problem for the country” if one candidate does not recognize the other as the winner.

In 2023, Mr. Noboa and Ms. González were largely unknown to most voters as they sought the presidency for the first time. They were first-term lawmakers in May 2023, when then-President Guillermo Lasso dissolved the National Assembly, shortening his own mandate as a result and triggering that year’s snap election.

Mr. Noboa’s first foray into politics was his stint as a lawmaker. An heir to a fortune built on the banana trade, Mr. Noboa 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.

Ms. González, 47, held various government jobs during the presidency of Rafael Correa, who led Ecuador from 2007 through 2017 with free-spending socially conservative policies and grew increasingly authoritarian in his last years as president.

Mr. Noboa, 37, declared Ecuador to be in a state of “internal armed conflict” in January 2024, allowing him to deploy thousands of soldiers to the streets to combat gangs and to charge people with terrorism counts for alleged ties to organized crime groups.

Under his watch, the homicide rate dropped from 46.18 per 100,000 people in 2023, to 38.76 per 100,000 people in 2024. But despite the decrease, the rate remained far higher than the 6.85 homicides per 100,000 people seen in 2019.

Some of Mr. Noboa’s heavy-handed crime-fighting tactics have come under scrutiny for testing the limits of laws and norms of governing. He has also been criticized for allegations of electoral irregularities he made after February’s vote.

Following the first-round election, Mr. Noboa said there had been “many irregularities” and that in certain provinces “there were things that didn’t add up.” He provided no further details or evidence. Electoral observers from the Organization of American States and the European Union ruled out fraud.

As Ms. González walked through the streets of Canuto, a town in the coastal province of Manabí where she grew up, to reach her voting center, supporters shouted “Luisa is the people.” Much of her support comes from people who long for the low crime and unemployment rates of Correa’s presidency but gloss over his authoritarian tendencies, the huge debt he ran up and the corruption-related sentence handed down to him in absentia in 2020.

“We have all united to rewrite the history of Ecuador,” she told people Sunday before denouncing reports of attempts to “plant marked ballots” with her name.

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Ecuador’s incumbent President and a leftist lawyer again vie for the top job in election runoff

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