Pubdate: Mon, 19 Dec 2005
Source: Houston Chronicle (TX)
Copyright: 2005 Houston Chronicle Publishing Company Division, Hearst Newspaper
Contact:  http://www.chron.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198
Author: John Otis, South America Bureau
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)

MORALES' OPPONENT CONCEDES BOLIVIAN ELECTION

Official Results Of The Presidential Race Aren't Known

LA PAZ, BOLIVIA - Leftist Evo Morales, a fierce critic  of Washington who 
campaigned on a platform of radical  change, seemed headed for a huge 
victory in Bolivia's  presidential contest Sunday after his main 
opponent  conceded defeat.

According to "quick counts," or ballot samplings,  commissioned by four 
Bolivian TV stations, Morales  received about 51 percent of the vote 
compared with  about 30 percent for former President Jorge Quiroga,  who 
ran second.

"We have a responsibility to change Bolivia's history,"  Morales -- who has 
vowed to roll back the U.S.-funded  drug war here and hike taxes on foreign 
energy  companies -- said in a rousing victory speech. "We must  get rid of 
the neo-liberal (economic) model and our status as a colony."

Morales, 46, needed more than 50 percent of the vote in  the 
eight-candidate race to avoid throwing the election  to Congress, which 
would select a winner between the  top two vote-getters.

Official government results are not expected until at  least today. If they 
show Morales did not receive more  than half the vote, Congress would by 
law have to pick  a victor. If the tallies do confirm a majority, 
Morales  will be sworn in Jan. 22 as the nation's first Indian  president.

Since Bolivia returned to democracy in 1982, no  presidential election has 
been decided in the first  round. Most polls predicted a tighter race 
between  Morales and Quiroga that would have gone to a runoff in Congress.

A Morales victory would mean that the Bush  administration will have to 
deal with another fiery  leftist in Latin America, one who admires 
Venezuela's  Hugo Chavez and Cuba's Fidel Castro and takes a dim  view of 
free market capitalism.

"If (the U.S.) wants relations, welcome. But we say  'no' to a relationship 
of submission," Morales said  after casting his ballot in a town in 
Bolivia's Chapare  jungle, where he got his start in politics 20 years 
ago  as a union leader for the region's growers of coca,  which is chewed 
by local Indians but can also be turned  into cocaine.

Son of poor Indians

Backed by many of the nation's farmers, miners and the  majority indigenous 
population, Morales -- the son of  poor Aymara Indians -- is a strong 
critic of economic  globalization, which he blames for the nation's 
64  percent poverty rate.

He promises to rip up existing contracts for foreign  energy companies 
operating here and negotiate more  lucrative deals for the Bolivian 
government. And he  plans to halt a U.S.-funded campaign to eradicate 
Bolivia's vast coca fields, which have made the country  the world's 
third-leading producer of cocaine.

Emotional congratulations

"I challenge the United States to create a real  alliance against 
narcotrafficking" said Morales, who  wants to produce and export coca 
products, such as tea,  but promises to crack down on cocaine producers 
and  drug lords.

Quiroga, a 45-year-old Texas A&M graduate favored by  many within the 
country's upper class, pledged to stay  the course with Bolivia's free 
market economy and seek  more foreign investment for the nation's vital oil 
and  natural gas industries.

But Quiroga was closely allied with traditional  political parties, which 
have been disgraced by  Bolivia's recent political and economic troubles.

"I congratulate Evo Morales," Quiroga said in an  emotional concession 
speech at a hotel ballroom in La  Paz, the Bolivian capital.

The election was designed to bring an end to more than  three years of 
turmoil in South America's poorest  nation. Angry over government 
corruption and plans to  export natural gas from a country where many of 
the  poor have no gas service in their homes, protesters  have forced out 
two presidents over the past two years.

Interim President Eduardo Rodriguez moved up the 2007  general elections to 
Sunday. Besides president and vice  president, Bolivians voted for 27 
senators, 130  congressional deputies and nine state governors.

"Evo is from a humble background, and that's important,  because we poor 
people need help," said Raul Vertiz, as  he waited to vote at an elementary 
school in the La Paz  suburb of El Alto. "We need jobs."

Richard Quiroga, a 34-year-old engineer added: "We need  revolutionary change."

A double-digit victory would mean that Morales may be  able to avoid the 
fate of several past presidents, who  struggled to rule with weak popular 
mandates because  they failed to win a majority in the first round 
and  were elected by Congress.

His Movement Toward Socialism party, polled better than  expected in 
congressional elections and could end up  with a majority, according to the 
exit polls. Still,  it's unclear how much Morales will be able to  accomplish.

Huge expectations

About one-fifth of the country's foreign aid comes from  Washington, which 
could force Morales to toe a more  moderate line and maintain decent 
relations with the  Bush administration. If he pushes too hard on 
foreign  energy companies, experts say, few international firms will invest 
in Bolivia.

"The Indians and the workers will want everything done  right away. They 
see in Evo the opportunity to improve  their lives," said Jimena Costa, a 
political analyst in  La Paz. "They are going to ask him for everything, 
but  that will be impossible."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom