Berliner Boersenzeitung - Teacher, vet, lawyer vie for presidency of progressive Uruguay

EUR -
AED 3.975512
AFN 71.386102
ALL 98.598596
AMD 417.971107
ANG 1.946667
AOA 987.120944
ARS 1066.394353
AUD 1.63225
AWG 1.948264
AZN 1.836052
BAM 1.956133
BBD 2.180771
BDT 129.071958
BGN 1.955819
BHD 0.40797
BIF 3136.778546
BMD 1.082369
BND 1.425308
BOB 7.46327
BRL 6.132165
BSD 1.080094
BTN 90.804348
BWP 14.478731
BYN 3.534101
BYR 21214.435096
BZD 2.17717
CAD 1.499292
CDF 3084.752286
CHF 0.93751
CLF 0.037142
CLP 1024.862583
CNY 7.711124
CNH 7.705705
COP 4649.046038
CRC 556.512672
CUC 1.082369
CUP 28.682782
CVE 110.283762
CZK 25.209472
DJF 192.334498
DKK 7.460456
DOP 65.003161
DZD 144.39955
EGP 52.804569
ERN 16.235537
ETB 129.209751
FJD 2.427483
FKP 0.828195
GBP 0.834707
GEL 2.943924
GGP 0.828195
GHS 17.388958
GIP 0.828195
GMD 75.226676
GNF 9317.015452
GTQ 8.354421
GYD 225.968443
HKD 8.411161
HNL 27.22789
HRK 7.456474
HTG 142.350793
HUF 403.17172
IDR 16917.375501
ILS 4.107856
IMP 0.828195
INR 90.99975
IQD 1414.940716
IRR 45573.152886
ISK 148.718851
JEP 0.828195
JMD 171.103851
JOD 0.767292
JPY 164.406998
KES 139.333598
KGS 92.863
KHR 4387.949199
KMF 492.423478
KPW 974.13198
KRW 1498.951321
KWD 0.331573
KYD 0.900053
KZT 523.519063
LAK 23732.037402
LBP 96721.454691
LKR 317.223968
LRD 207.379112
LSL 19.112552
LTL 3.195955
LVL 0.654715
LYD 5.202933
MAD 10.675916
MDL 19.441307
MGA 4964.936399
MKD 61.625484
MMK 3515.492738
MNT 3677.890359
MOP 8.644271
MRU 43.031712
MUR 49.994964
MVR 16.624941
MWK 1872.953244
MXN 21.464027
MYR 4.708481
MZN 69.174489
NAD 19.112552
NGN 1776.762737
NIO 39.748598
NOK 11.839299
NPR 145.291416
NZD 1.803849
OMR 0.41666
PAB 1.080084
PEN 4.05459
PGK 4.320975
PHP 62.998234
PKR 300.052791
PLN 4.343385
PYG 8596.462469
QAR 3.93677
RON 4.973266
RSD 117.049203
RUB 104.167942
RWF 1488.880807
SAR 4.065483
SBD 9.038928
SCR 14.602267
SDG 651.049497
SEK 11.439034
SGD 1.428256
SHP 0.828195
SLE 24.623672
SLL 22696.736168
SOS 617.316427
SRD 36.231254
STD 22402.855852
SVC 9.450608
SYP 2719.485219
SZL 19.108604
THB 36.579795
TJS 11.513659
TMT 3.788292
TND 3.363072
TOP 2.53502
TRY 37.120062
TTD 7.338248
TWD 34.722673
TZS 2949.45567
UAH 44.557004
UGX 3960.673808
USD 1.082369
UYU 44.857631
UZS 13855.357136
VEF 3920939.062369
VES 44.192205
VND 27486.764248
VUV 128.501071
WST 3.031915
XAF 656.080738
XAG 0.032087
XAU 0.000398
XCD 2.925157
XDR 0.810353
XOF 656.074676
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.971117
ZAR 19.133418
ZMK 9742.624559
ZMW 28.731888
ZWL 348.522421
  • RBGPF

    62.9700

    62.97

    +100%

  • SCS

    0.1200

    12.59

    +0.95%

  • CMSC

    -0.0202

    24.62

    -0.08%

  • RYCEF

    0.0100

    7.21

    +0.14%

  • NGG

    -0.1000

    66.34

    -0.15%

  • AZN

    -1.0500

    75.9

    -1.38%

  • RIO

    0.1200

    64.61

    +0.19%

  • GSK

    -0.2400

    37.74

    -0.64%

  • CMSD

    0.0600

    24.82

    +0.24%

  • BTI

    -0.0600

    34.65

    -0.17%

  • RELX

    0.2800

    47.1

    +0.59%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    12.97

    -0.62%

  • BCE

    -0.0700

    33.14

    -0.21%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    9.51

    +0.53%

  • BCC

    3.0600

    136.97

    +2.23%

  • BP

    -0.0100

    31.3

    -0.03%

Teacher, vet, lawyer vie for presidency of progressive Uruguay

Teacher, vet, lawyer vie for presidency of progressive Uruguay

Voters in Latin America's most stable democracy, Uruguay, go to the polls on Sunday in a presidential election pitting a left-wing history teacher against a conservative veterinarian and a bodybuilding lawyer.

Text size:

Polls show security topping the concerns of voters in the tiny country of 3.4 million people, wedged between Brazil and Argentina and facing an increase in drug-related violence in recent years.

While the number of reported robberies and incidents of cattle-rustling -- Uruguay has more cattle than people -- have fallen sharply under outgoing center-right President Luis Lacalle Pou, the murder rate remains high.

The pension system is also a key theme in the campaign.

On the same day as the presidential election, Uruguayans are called on to vote on a controversial proposal from the PIT-CNT union to lower the minimum retirement age from 65 to 60 and to ban private pension schemes.

Analysts have warned that the proposal, which PIT-CNT says would cost $460 million a year but detractors estimate at more than twice that, could further damage the finances of a country still recovering from the Covid-19 pandemic and a record drought in 2023.

The fiscal deficit stood at 4.4 percent of GDP in August.

The three main presidential candidates have all said they will reject the plebiscite.

- Bodybuilding fanatic -

Lacalle Pou is barred by the constitution from seeking a second consecutive five-year term.

Polls show history professor Yamandu Orsi, 57, from the center-left Frente Amplio (Broad Front) of cult former president Jose "Pepe" Mujica, leading the race.

They show Alvaro Delgado, a 55-year-old conservative veterinarian from Lacalle Pou's National Party in second and telegenic lawyer Andres Ojada, 40, of the Colorado Party in third.

"I vote for the Broad Front because it is always on the side of the people," Narahiana Lopez, a 26-year-old supporter of Orsi's, told AFP during his final campaign rally in the capital Montevideo.

Gustavo Magarinos, a 68-year-old economist, said he backed Delgado as the representative of "a successful government" which showed "clear and courageous leadership in proposing unavoidable reforms."

If, as expected, no candidate wins Sunday's vote outright, the top two contenders will go into a runoff round on November 24.

Orsi is a protege of the famously humble Mujica.

He was born in the countryside in a house with no electricity and campaigned as a man of the people.

Delgado has sought to woo rural voters by saying he is happier on horseback than in one of Uruguay's ritzy beach resorts.

But he was mocked as a "caveman" on social media during the campaign for calling his running mate, former trade unionist Valeria Ripoll, a "hottie".

He later apologized, calling the remark a "mistake."

Ojeda, a TV legal pundit and bodybuilding fanatic who compares himself to Argentina's libertarian President Milei, caused a stir by recording a campaign ad in the gym, where he flaunted his toned physique.

- Liberal bastion -

The election has generated little excitement in Uruguay, which is one of the richest countries per-capita in Latin America and one of the most liberal.

"There is simply no sense that there is much at stake," Benjamin Gedan, director of the Latin American Program at the Wilson Center, in the United States, told AFP.

Most of the campaigning for the presidential and concomitant parliamentary elections has taken place on social media.

Ahead of the election, AFP's fact-checking team noted a surge in posts warning of the risk of election fraud, which appeared aimed at discrediting the vote.

Uruguay gained a reputation as a liberal mold-breaker under successive left-wing governments between 2005 and 2020.

The country legalized abortion and same-sex marriage and became the world's first nation to allow recreational cannabis use.

It has also blazed a trail in the greening of its economy, with over 90 percent of its electricity coming from renewable sources.

But high levels of violent crime in recent years have been a concern for voters.

A second plebiscite held Sunday will ask whether the police should be allowed to carry out nighttime raids on homes in order to crack down on drug trafficking.

Voters are expected to reject the measure.

(K.Müller--BBZ)