Ecuador’s presidential election Sunday (February 9, 2025) is shaping up to be a repeat of the 2023 race, when voters chose a young, conservative millionaire over the leftist protégée of the country’s most influential president this century.
President Daniel Noboa and Luisa González are the clear front-runners among the pool of 16 candidates. All have promised voters to reduce the widespread crime that pushed their lives into an unnerving new normal four years ago.
The spike in violence across the South American country is tied to the trafficking of cocaine produced in neighbouring Colombia and Peru. So many voters have become crime victims that their personal and collective losses will be a determining factor in deciding whether a third president in four years can turn Ecuador around or if Mr. Noboa deserves more time in office.
Voting is mandatory in Ecuador. In the port city of Guayaquil, people lined up under a light rain outside a public university where tens of thousands of voters were expected to cast ballots.
“For me, this president is disastrous,” said Marta Barres, 35, who went to the voting centre with her three teenage children. “Can he change things in four more years? No. He hasn’t done anything.”
Ms. Barres, who must pay $25 a month to a local gang to avoid harassment or worse, said she would vote for Ms. González because she believes she can reduce crime across the board and improve the economy.
More than 13.7 million people are eligible to vote. To win outright, a candidate needs 50% of the vote or at least 40% with a 10-point lead over the closest challenger. If needed, a runoff election would take place on April 13.
Mr. Noboa defeated Ms. González in the October 2023 runoff of a snap election triggered by the decision of then-President Guillermo Lasso to dissolve the National Assembly and shorten his own mandate as a result. Mr. Noboa and Ms. González, a mentee of former President Rafael Correa, had only served short stints as lawmakers before launching their 2023 presidential campaigns.
Mr. Noboa, 37, is an heir to a fortune built on the banana trade. He opened an event organising company when he was 18 and then joined his father’s Mr. Noboa Corp., where he held management positions in the shipping, logistics and commercial areas. His political career began in 2021 when he won a seat in the National Assembly and chaired its Economic Development Commission.
Under his presidency, the homicide rate dropped from 46.18 per 100,000 people in 2023 to 38.76 per 100,000 people last year. Still, it remains far higher than the 6.85 per 100,000 people in 2019.
Ms. González, 47, held various government jobs during the presidency of Mr. Correa, who led Ecuador from 2007 through 2017 with free-spending socially conservative policies and grew increasingly authoritarian in his last years as president. He was sentenced to prison in absentia in 2020 in a corruption scandal.
Ms. González was a lawmaker from 2021 until May 2023, when Lasso dissolved the National Assembly. She was unknown to most voters until Mr. Correa’s party picked her as its presidential candidate for the snap election.
Published – February 09, 2025 08:26 pm IST