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courage is contagious
Viewing cable 06QUITO407, ECUADOR ELECTIONS, NINE MONTHS OUT
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Reference ID | Created | Released | Classification | Origin |
---|---|---|---|---|
06QUITO407 | 2006-02-14 13:57 | 2011-05-02 00:00 | UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY | Embassy Quito |
VZCZCXYZ0015
OO RUEHWEB
DE RUEHQT #0407/01 0451357
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
O 141357Z FEB 06
FM AMEMBASSY QUITO
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 3628
INFO RUEHBO/AMEMBASSY BOGOTA PRIORITY 5352
RUEHCV/AMEMBASSY CARACAS PRIORITY 1567
RUEHLP/AMEMBASSY LA PAZ FEB 9656
RUEHPE/AMEMBASSY LIMA PRIORITY 0328
RUEHGL/AMCONSUL GUAYAQUIL PRIORITY 9917
RHMFISS/CDR USSOUTHCOM MIAMI FL
UNCLAS QUITO 000407
SIPDIS
SENSITIVE
SIPDIS
WHA PLEASE PASS TO USOAS
E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: KDEM PGOV PHUM PREL EC
SUBJECT: ECUADOR ELECTIONS, NINE MONTHS OUT
REF: A. 05 QUITO 2235
¶B. SECSTATE 18883
¶1. (U) Summary: Nine months out from national congressional
and presidential elections, campaign season is heating up
with prospective candidates plumping for support, courting
running-mates, and fueling speculation over electoral
alliances. As speculation turns to the elections, the
Palacio government is losing what little control it had over
the national agenda and its reform agenda seems even more
illusory. With major party candidates holding back until
closer to the opening of the formal campaign in mid-July, the
presidential field remains unclear. U.S. interests including
the Manta base, the Occidental Petroleum commercial dispute
and the FTA under negotiation with the GOE are all likely to
provide nationalist fodder for candidates, left and right.
¶2. (SBU) Elections are traditionally peaceful here, but the
politicized electoral tribunal does not inspire full
confidence. Under the Nethercutt amendment, direct USG
assistance to the GOE is restricted. The OAS signed an
agreement to provide the TSE with technical assistance on
February 10. To protect the USG interest in free, fair,
inclusive and transparent elections under our democracy
promotion strategy (Ref A), we urge USG support for this OAS
assistance. End Summary.
Pre-Candidates Multiplying
--------------------------
¶3. (U) Nine parties and ten national movements have been
registered by the TSE for participation in the October
elections. A dozen more movements are being considered by
the TSE. The formal campaign period begins with inscription
of candidates in mid-July (the candidate lists close August
15), so at this point there are many presidential aspirants
(declared and undeclared) but no formal candidates. Here is
a brief and still partial rundown of aspirants, in rough
descending order of popularity:
-- Alvaro Noboa, PRIAN (possible VP-his wife). The
billionaire banana magnate benefits from his personal
publicity juggernaut, despite acute lack of charisma.
Electoral proposals still unclear. Leads in most polls with
approximately 20%.
-- Leon Roldos (possible VPs - indigenous leader Nina Pacari,
Quito councilwoman Luz Elena Coloma). Thus far has failed to
galvanize a coalition of the left around his candidacy, but
is still trying with the Democratic Left (ID). Difficult to
understand and uncharismatic, he has high name recognition as
the brother of a reformist young president who died in
office; also respected by the older generation. Supporters
include group led by Quito councilman Antonio Ricaurte.
-- Rafael Correa, Alianza Pais (possible VPs - Lourdes Tiban,
Manuela Gallegos). Just back from talks with Pres. Chavez in
Caracas and now preparing to visit Havana, former Finance
Minister Correa has an anti-FTA and economic nationalist
message. Attracting support from nascent Bolivarian groups
and leftist intellectuals, causing resentment from
traditional parties. Supporters include former Col. Jorge
Brito and anti-U.S. congressman Carlos Vallejo.
-- Ex-president Lucio Gutierrez, Patriotic Society Party
(PSP). Running from behind bars. Recently charged with
constitutional offenses in addition to national security
offenses, possibly prolonging his incarceration pending trial
and preventing an actual candidacy. Support concentrated in
the less populous Amazon region.
-- Ex-president Abdala Bucaram, Ecuadorian Roldosista Party
(PRE). The former ousted president, living in self-imposed
exile in Panama, recently praised Correa, then, spurned,
declared he will run again. The Supreme Court president
recently overturned his precedessor's ruling which had
cleared Bucaram of criminal charges for corruption, making
any Bucaram candidacy symbolic and likely to be challenged on
legal grounds.
-- Luis Villacis, Movement for Popular Democracy (MPD).
Congressman from the former communist party which controls
the national teachers union.
-- Eduardo Ayala Mora, Socialist Party (PS). The party is
also considering an alliance with Leon Roldos.
-- Eduardo Delgado, "Common People's Movement." Though not
yet announced, we are told that Delgado, the defrocked Jesuit
priest and former professor, champion of the movement to put
the FTA to a referendum vote, and spokesman for the
"forajido" movement which ousted Gutierrez, will run. His
candidacy will further split the leftist vote courted by
Correa and Roldos.
-- Jaime Damerval, Coalition of Popular Forces (CFP). From
Guayaquil, where he is unpopular for his actions against
mayor Nebot's security augmentation efforts while serving as
Gutierrez' minister of government.
-- Marco Proano Maya. Independent congressional deputy,
formerly of Bucaram's PRE, claims he has been asked by a
citizens movement to run for president. Supporters
reportedly include liberation theologist and former bishop of
Cuenca Luna Tobar.
¶3. (SBU) Three major parties, the Social Christians (PSC),
ID and indigenous Pachakutik movement, are holding back on
settling on candidates. In the PSC, congressional VP Cynthia
Viteri has been touted, but suffers from her close
association with party boss Febres Cordero. The ID,
meanwhile, is being courted by Leon Roldos and is conducting
internal polls to test the appeal of its own aspirants,
including Quito mayor Paco Moncayo, ID president Guillermo
Landazuri, congressional maverick Carlos Gonzalez, Pichincha
prefect Ramiro Gonzalez, and congressional deputy Andres
Paez. Pachakutik, the indigenous party, has declared its
intention to run its own candidate, possibly Cotacachi mayor
Auki Tituana, but has been hurt by the recent exit of several
mestizo leaders and the Otavalo mayor, Mario Conejo, over
internal disputes.
¶4. (SBU) Most candidates are calling for unity involving
alliances of some sort, either on the left or across the
political spectrum. Perverse incentives mitigate the
likelihood of such alliances until after the first round of
voting, since most believe it necessary to have a
presidential contender in the first round to help boost the
appeal of its congressional candidates. Most observers
consider a PSC-ID electoral alliance to be unlikely, but
others, including Andean parliamentarian and media
personality Freddy Ehlers, are promoting it behind the
scenes. The political dream team of mayors Moncayo and Nebot
could win the election, but is fraught with contradictions
which probably rule it out.
Election Authorities Need Outside Help
--------------------------------------
¶5. (SBU) Electoral tribunal (TSE) president Xavier Cazar
told the Ambassador on February 6 that he had recently
visited numerous provinces in Ecuador to hear private
concerns/complaints over electoral logistics. The TSE is
committed to addressing these concerns and correcting any
that would impede smooth elections in October/November. The
Ambassador encouraged further outreach to help generate
public confidence in the electoral process. Cazar said the
GOE/TSE was looking for as much international support as
possible (from the OAS, CAPEL, and others) to do so. The TSE
would also work with domestic electoral watchdogs such as
USAID-supported NGO "Participacion Ciudadana," to ensure
open, transparent elections.
¶6. (SBU) Cazar visited New York and Washington February 7-10
to promote the vote abroad. He hoped to raise voter
registration rates of Ecuadorians residing abroad through
media outreach to the Ecuadorian community. Ecuadorian
consuls had recently been encouraged by the MFA to get out
and register Ecuadorian voters, which could improve
disappointing registration numbers. In Washington, Cazar
signed an agreement with OAS SecGen Insulza pledging OAS
election assistance reportedly including: updating of the
voter rolls, fines for election violations, and development
of a database of overseas voters. Ecuador's OAS Ambassador
told the press the GOE also planned to invite the OAS to send
an observer mission to Ecuador for the elections.
¶7. (SBU) Noting reports that the Venezuelan electoral body
(CNE) might be providing support to the TSE the Ambassador
conveyed OAS and USG concern (Ref B) about the CNE's
legitimacy. Cazar said that a few CNE officials had visited
in 2005, but as far as he knew, the CNE is no longer
assisting the TSE.
Low Prospects for Electoral Reform
----------------------------------
¶8. (U) President Palacio sent a package of proposed
electoral reform bills to Congress on February 13, proposing
measures to increase internal democracy in political parties,
provide fair access to the media for candidates, and to
clarify rules for citizen recall votes and referenda. Six
previous attempts by Palacio to press for similar political
reforms were blocked by Congress and the TSE.
¶9. (SBU) Prior to the unveiling of these new reforms, the
Ambassador asked Cazar which reforms he thought might
prosper. Cazar, former personal lawyer to PSC leader Leon
Febres Cordero, said he was not sure what reforms the
government would propose, but if they consist of more than
400 pages of text as rumored, it would indicate that the
government is not serious about reform. To be applied in
this year's elections, any reforms must be approved by
Congress and implemented by July 15, he said. Cazar
expressed confidence that Congress would independently pass
needed reforms to raise campaign finance limits and allocate
plurinominal seats by proportional representation in time for
the elections.
Campaign Issues
---------------
¶10. (SBU) With political and economic instability affecting
all levels of society, this election should focus on issues
of economic justice, social development, and democratic
renovation. Unfortunately, issues linked to external forces
including the U.S. role in Ecuador and the Colombia conflict
are very likely to dominate.
¶11. (SBU) Leaders of the indigenous organization CONAIE and
its sister movement, Pachakutik, have already staked their
electoral fortunes on rejection of an FTA with the U.S., and
on demands for nationalization of Occidental Petroleum's
holdings in Ecuador. In contrast, PSC leaders have privately
expressed opposition to Oxy's nationalization. Some ID
leaders have done the same.
¶12. (SBU) Relations with Colombia are certain to become a
campaign issue, with GOE protests over a recent border
incursion stoking nationalist fires. The GOE has also raised
the issue of U.S. use of the Manta air base as a chit in FTA
negotiations, if only for domestic consumption, making it
more likely that this U.S. interest also becomes a campaign
issue, at least for the left.
USG Resources and Interests
---------------------------
¶13. (SBU) With the presidential field still in flux, no
candidate stands out, and many could prove difficult to work
with. Correa raises the greatest concern as a stalking-horse
for Chavez, but none of the others would have much chance of
lasting their mandate. Political alliances are essential not
only to win the presidency, but to govern afterwards. With
political stability sorely lacking here since 1997, assuring
free, fair, transparent and inclusive elections is one of our
paramount democracy interests. Though this will not
guarantee a government we like, failure can only hurt our
over-arching goal of strengthening Ecuador's fragile
democracy.
¶14. (SBU) We have approximately $884,000 available for the
elections, including $200,000 to assist the TSE directly;
$384,000 to fund civil society civic education and debates
and monitor campaign spending; and $300,000 to fund domestic
observation and quick counts. NED is funding an $80,000
indigenous participation project, and IFES is promoting (for
$300,000) participation by Afro-Ecuadorians. NDI and IRI
have plans to train political parties.
¶15. (SBU) Despite this USG support, we consider direct OAS
technical assistance to the TSE, both for election
organization and observation, critical to ensuring clean
elections. We request that the Department and USOAS
encourage the OAS to prioritize Ecuador in its 2006 electoral
budget planning.
JEWELL