Nicaragua's President Ortega Eyes Easy Re-election

Nicaragua's President Ortega eyes easy re-election

MANAGUA, Nov 4, (APP - UrduPoint / Pakistan Point News - 04th Nov, 2016 ) - Nicaragua's President Daniel Ortega looks to be heading for an easy re-election to a fourth term this weekend, with his wife as his running mate.

Surveys credit the pair with more than 60 percent voter support for Sunday's balloting, far ahead of their rivals. But critics inside and outside the country are calling foul over tactics that have sidelined the opposition and restricted foreign scrutiny.

"The United States has repeatedly stated its serious concern about the shrinking democratic space and the lack of rule of law in Nicaragua," US State Department spokesman John Kirby said. "A democratic election is not defined on election day only," he added.

"It is a long process and it is the process that matters." Gaspard Estrada of the Paris Institute of Political Studies agreed. "This election is organized in the worst conditions possible," he said.

"Nicaragua is a democracy without democrats." Opposition groups, are calling the elections a "farce" after a court order replaced the head of a key party with an Ortega-linked figure, a They are urging a boycott of the vote, which will also choose 90 lawmakers and 20 representatives in congress.

That will focus attention on turnout figures, with a Nicaraguan survey firm, M&R, predicting abstention will be around 25 percent, in line with previous elections. One opposition leader, Violeta Granera, told reporters on Thursday that "we are going to document with photos, videos and citizen complaints the population's rejection" of the vote.

But even many detractors acknowledge the broad public support for Ortega, a 70-year-old former Marxist rebel who first took the presidency in 1985, after the country's bloody left-wing revolution against a dictatorial dynasty.

After losing re-election, he spent 17 years agitating in opposition before finally making his comeback in 2006 and winning another new term in 2011. His latest long stint at the helm has seen the country rack up strong economic growth, partly fueled by nearly $5 billion in credit and investment from Venezuela, a key ally now in crisis.

Ortega developed social programs that have greatly reduced the number of poor -- an important feat in what is still one of the poorest nations in the Americas. That earned him undying backing from much of the population.

But he has pulled back on his public appearances in recent years. Instead, his wife Rosario Murillo, the government's chief spokesperson and given to wearing colorful clothes and jewelry, has become the face of the administration.

Her daily broadcasts on state media, delivered in a big-sister tone, espouse national unity and the government's dedication to the people. She has also put her stamp on the capital Managua by having giant, multicolored metal "trees of life" sculptures erected, giving the center of the generally rundown city a distinctive zest.

Ortega is looking to elevate her to the post of his vice president this weekend.