Drifting from the left across Latin America

South Americans are voting next month, write Oliver Balch in Buenos Aires and Naomi Mapstone in Lima

South Americans are voting next month, write Oliver Balchin Buenos Aires and Naomi Mapstonein Lima

AS LATIN America gears up for a spate of elections over the next few weeks, voters in Uruguay will be watched closely this weekend for confirmation that the region’s leftward drift of recent years is on the wane.

“My model is Lula, not Chávez,” José Mujica, Uruguay’s ruling left-wing party candidate, has said regularly during his campaign.

Placing himself in the mould of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Brazil’s moderate leftist president, rather than of Hugo Chávez, Venezuela’s fiery, radical anti-US leader, should help him to win tomorrow’s presidential run-off, polls suggest.

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Such a move towards the political centre in countries such as Chile, Uruguay, Colombia and Brazil has led some analysts to rethink traditional party divisions.

“The big debate going on in Latin America is not so much between right and left, but between institutions and populism,” said Felipe Noguera, a Buenos Aires-based political analyst.

“Institutions will win in the long run. But how long that will take and how the battle is going, we don’t know.”

Mujica (74), who was a guerrilla during the 1960s, has sought to rebut opposition claims that his government would see a shift towards the radical socialism of Chávez’s so-called Bolivarian revolution in Venezuela.

Such an electoral ploy makes sense.

Association with Chávez has increasingly become a liability for Latin America’s presidential candidates.

The economies of Brazil and Venezuela provide starkly contrasting examples to the rest of the region.

Brazil has raced out of recession and is expected to grow 3.5 per cent next year, according to the International Monetary Fund, while Venezuela’s economy has just slipped into recession and is plagued by power and water shortages.

Leading left-wing candidates in the last presidential elections in Peru and Mexico both saw popular support ebb away after allegations of overt Venezuelan support, notes Peter Hakim, president of the Washington- based Inter-American Dialogue think tank.

“It’s very rare that a candidate associates himself with Chávez . . . Even Rafael Correa [president of Ecuador] did not associate himself explicitly,” he said.

In Chile, the campaign leading to the election on December 13th is largely free of ideological politics.

“There seems to be an agreement that some things should be off the table when it comes to discussing policy issues,” said Patricio Novia, a Latin American specialist at New York University.

The list of sacrosanct subjects includes a range of orthodox economic and social policies, such as the need for a strong central bank, counter-cyclical fiscal policies and increased investment in education.

As such, a victory for the right- wing National Renewal party – as the majority of polls predict – would not usher in a marked change in policy direction.

“Chileans seem to be saying they want to keep the same policies, but have new people lead those policies,” said Novia.

Just as the political left in Chile has favoured a move towards the centre since coming to power almost two decades ago, so the revitalised right is adopting a moderate course.

"Our objective is to maintain the network of social protection that has been constructed by the last governments, especially during the government of Michelle Bachelet," Sebastián Piñera, the presidential front- runner, told the Financial Times.

Chile’s political convergence is resulting in a blurring of lines between traditional right and left-wing issues.

Piñera’s campaign, for example, has surprised voters by featuring a television advertisement openly endorsing homosexual couples.

“This shows a level of tolerance that was unthinkable for the right a few years ago, but now it seems to be a non-issue for the right,” said Novia.

One exception in the region is Bolivia.

Evo Morales, the left-wing president, looks likely to secure another term in presidential elections on December 6th.

Morales has nationalised the country’s gas fields, rewritten the constitution and is a strong critic of the US.

Opposition figures claim that Morales’s campaign has been part-funded by Chávez, his close ally.

His vocal support for Chávez’s policies has not dented his approval ratings, however.

This stands at 52 per cent – well ahead of his nearest opponent, Manfred Reyes Villa, with 21 per cent.

The Bolivian president – a polarising figure domestically who is accused by the opposition of authoritarianism – has been aided by a resilient economy, which has drawn praise for his administration from the IMF.

– (Copyright: The Financial Times Ltd 2009)