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COSTA RICA: Last-Ditch Leftwing Alliance to 'Save' the Country
By Daniel Zueras
SAN JOSÉ - Political forces on the left in Costa Rica have formed a partial last-minute alliance to support Ottón Solís, the presidential candidate for the centre-left Citizens' Action Party (PAC), in a bid to counter the conservative lead that the polls predict for the upcoming Feb. 7 elections.
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CHILE: Steering to the Right
By Daniela Estrada
SANTIAGO - After 52 years without a victory at the ballot box, the political right is coming back to govern Chile, as multi-millionnaire businessman and former senator Sebastián Piñera narrowly won the run-off against Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle in Sunday's presidential election.
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BRAZIL: Electoral Reform "Just a Sop" to Women
By Fabiana Frayssinet
RIO DE JANEIRO - The Brazilian government is congratulating itself on the first-stage approval of a draft electoral law that increases women's participation in party politics. However, the women's movement says it introduces no changes to a power structure that excludes women from politics.
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MEXICO: Record Protest Vote Amid Sweeping PRI Gains
By Diego Cevallos
MEXICO CITY - The centre-right governing party and the leftwing opposition in Mexico were dealt a major blow in the midterm congressional and local elections on Sunday, in which the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) made a resounding comeback, reviving memories of the past.
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ARGENTINA: Gearing Up for the Presidential Race
By Marcela Valente
BUENOS AIRES - The government's poor showing in Argentina's mid-term congressional elections Sunday has cleared the way for would-be successors to President Cristina Fernández in the 2011 presidential elections. Experts say that, at present, no potential rival has a clear lead.
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EL SALVADOR: Crisis, Poverty Huge Challenges for Leftist President
By Raúl Gutiérrez
SAN SALVADOR - The main challenges faced by El Salvador’s leftwing president-elect Mauricio Funes are forging understandings with other political sectors, adopting measures to deal with the economic crisis, and especially its effects on the poor, and strengthening the country’s institutions, say analysts.
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EL SALVADOR: Elections Mark Shift to the Left
By Raúl Gutiérrez
SAN SALVADOR - Salvadoran president-elect Mauricio Funes of the leftist insurgency-turned-political party FMLN promised to build an "inclusive" government, with a view to bringing about reconciliation in Salvadoran society and creating a "future of progress" for all Salvadorans.
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EL SALVADOR: Left Is Clear Favourite, But Die Not Yet Cast
By Raúl Gutiérrez
SAN SALVADOR - The campaign for next Sunday’s presidential elections in El Salvador wrapped up at midnight Wednesday, muddied by complaints of irregularities and fear mongering propaganda that could influence the outcome.
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Q&A: "Campaign of Fear Is Atrocious" Ahead of Salvadoran Vote
Raúl Gutiérrez interviews election observer RAFAEL RONCAGLIOLO
SAN SALVADOR - "I would not say that the media in Latin America contribute to fomenting civic culture, overall. They generally head in the opposite direction," says Rafael Roncagliolo, a Peruvian sociologist, journalist and election consultant.
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VENEZUELA: Ten More Years, If He Can Woo a Divided Country
By Humberto Márquez
CARACAS - Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez won Sunday's referendum with 54 percent of the vote, which will allow him to stand for reelection indefinitely. But he will have to exercise leadership over a country that is stubbornly split in two.
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VENEZUELA: Chávez - A Referendum of His Very Own
By Humberto Márquez
CARACAS - After a decade in office, Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez goes to the country on Sunday in another attempt to change the constitution so that he can stand for reelection "for at least another 10 years".
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VENEZUELA: Social Issues Played Down in Referendum Campaign
By Humberto Márquez
CARACAS - A mob seized a man suspected of rape in El Valle, a populous district in the southwest of the Venezuelan capital, beat him to death, and then burned his corpse - twice over, so that the press could film and photograph the scene. In spite of the horrifying images, few public figures mentioned the case.
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EL SALVADOR: Left on Track to Win Elections
By Raúl Gutiérrez
SAN SALVADOR - The leftist FMLN is the front-runner in the polls for Sunday’s parliamentary and municipal elections in El Salvador, and analysts say a victory would boost its chances of winning the Mar. 15 presidential elections.
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VENEZUELA: New Battle for Indefinite Reelection
By Humberto Márquez
CARACAS - Venezuela is heading for another electoral battle, after President Hugo Chávez kicked off 2009 by putting forward a new proposal to reform the constitution so that all elected officials may be indefinitely reelected.
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VENEZUELA: Reviving the Debate on Presidential Reelection
By Humberto Márquez
CARACAS - Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez, who has governed the country since 1999, plans to seek reelection until 2019, or even 2021.
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Over the last few years Latin America has seen a slow but sure political turn towards the left, while the United States, the dominant power in the Americas and the world, has its most conservative administration in nearly a century. Presidential election results in 2006 seem to confirm the direction that Latin America is heading, which includes the search for alliances with other countries of the developing South and with Europe. Will Latin America move beyond its status as the United States' "backyard" and become a power in its own right? The ballot boxes may just answer that question.

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POLITICS-SUDAN: African Leaders Call for Peaceful Elections
ECONOMY: Greek Crisis Impacts the Balkans
U.S.: Families Sue Over Guantanamo Deaths
NIGERIA: Acting President Consolidates Power Amid Unrest
CLIMATE CHANGE: A Year On, Little Change in Political Climate
LATIN AMERICA: Still a Long Way to Go, for Black Women
ZAMBIA: School Policy for Teen Mothers a Partial Success
KENYA: Trying to Rebuild Communities After Floods
IRAN: New Budget May Add to Uncertainties, Political Strains
Q&A: Sri Lanka Remains Defiant of U.N. Chief
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THE MEANING OF THE YEAR OF ELECTIONS IN LATIN AMERICA
   By Jennifer McCoy
LATIN AMERICA AFTER A YEAR'S ELECTIONS: DIVERSITY AND UNCERTAINTY
   By Joaquin Roy
PARTNERSHIP, NOT DOMINANCE:
VOICE OF ANOTHER AMERICA
   By Johan Galtung and Marilyn Langlois