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Uruguay’s presidential candidates locked together in polls

The country is at the polls for a second round of voting to choose their next president.

By contributor By Nayara Batschke, Associated Press
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Yamandu Orsi smiles while placing his vote in a ballot box
Yamandu Orsi, the presidential candidate of the Broad Front, votes at a polling station in Canelones, Uruguay (Matilde Campodonico/AP)

Uruguayans are at the polls for a second round of voting to choose their next president.

The conservative governing party and the left-leaning coalition are locked in a close run-off after failing to win an outright majority in last month’s vote.

The election has turned into a hard-fought race between Alvaro Delgado, the incumbent party’s candidate, and Yamandi Orsi from the Broad Front, a coalition of leftist and centre-left parties that governed for 15 years until the 2019 victory of centre-right President Luis Lacalle Pou.

It oversaw the legalisation of abortion, same-sex marriage and the sale of marijuana in the small South American nation.

Alvaro Delgado smiling while waving the national flag
Alvaro Delgado, presidential candidate for the ruling National Party, during his closing rally ahead of the vote (Santiago Mazzarovich/AP)

Mr Orsi’s Broad Front took 44% of the vote while Mr Delgado’s National Party won just 27% in the first round of voting on October 27, but the other conservative parties that make up the government coalition — in particular, the Colorado Party — notched 20% of the vote collectively, enough to give Mr Delgado an edge over his challenger.

Congress ended up evenly split in the October vote. Most polls have shown a virtual tie with nearly 10% of Uruguayan voters undecided even at this late stage.

Analysts say the candidates’ lacklustre campaigns and broad consensus on key issues have helped generate extraordinary voter indecision and apathy in an election dominated by discussions about taxes and social spending, but largely free of the anti-establishment rage that has vaulted populist outsiders to power elsewhere.

Mr Delgado, 55, a rural veterinarian with a long career in the National Party, campaigned on a vow to continue the legacy of current President Lacalle Pou — in some ways making the election into a referendum on his leadership.

He campaigned under the slogan “re-elect a good government.”

Flags flying against a blue sky
Uruguay’s national flag and political party banners fly under a blue sky on election day in Montevideo (Natacha Pisarenko/AP)

While a string of corruption scandals briefly tainted the Lacalle Pou’s government last year, the president — who constitutionally cannot run for a second consecutive term — enjoys high approval ratings and a strong economy expected to grow 3.2% this year, according to the International Monetary Fund.

Mr Delgado served most recently as Secretary of the Presidency and promises to press on with his predecessor’s pro-business, market-friendly policies.

His coalition would likely continue pursuing a prospective trade deal with China that has raised hackles in Mercosur, an alliance of South American countries that promotes regional commerce.

Mr Orsi, 57, a former history teacher and two-time mayor from a working-class background, is widely seen as an heir to former president Jose “Pepe” Mujica, a former Marxist guerrilla who boosted Uruguay’s profile as one of the region’s most socially liberal and environmentally sustainable nations during his 2010-2015 term.

Promising to forge a “new left” in Uruguay, he has proposed tax incentives to lure investment and industrial policy to boost Uruguay’s critical agricultural sector.

He has also floated social security reforms that would buck the demographic trend in lowering the retirement age but fall short of a radical overhaul sought by Uruguay’s unions.

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