May 7 Ecuadorian Referendum Fast Approaches
Council on
Hemispheric Affairs Research Memorandum
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Press Release: May 7
Ecuadorian Referendum Fast Approaches
New vote
will prove if President Correa still packs political power
and whether Ecuador's fragile political stability can be
maintained
• Arrogance and sclerotic personality
needlessly costs Correa popular backing
• He could be a
more effective coalition builder
• Breakdown of
alliance with indigenous has cost him political
capital
• Ecuador’s divisiveness has surprisingly not
hurt the country’s leader with major defections—Correa
is still likely to win the referendum
Once again,
Ecuador finds itself deeply divided leading up to the
country’s sixth popular referendum scheduled for Saturday,
May 7. The current campaign exemplifies the ideological
fragmentation currently afflicting Ecuador, pitting the
country’s President Rafael Correa against an array of
groups with varying political profiles. Wide-ranging
opposition exists against a pro-vote among the indigenous
population, labor unions, environmental organizations, mass
media, university students, Catholic clergy, the upper and
upper-middle classes, and political parties like the Partido
Social Cristiano, Izquierda Democrática, Sociedad
Patrótica and Movimiento Popular Democrático. Distaste for
Correa and the looming referendum have risen to an alarming
degree as he subjects the electorate to policy initiatives
that are perceived as relatively trivial concerns, while
ignoring what appear to be far more looming problems.
For full article click here
This
analysis was prepared by COHA Research Fellow Olga
Imbaquingo and COHA Research Associate Christina Sabato
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