Bolivia heads to a presidential runoff
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1don MSN
Bolivia’s presidential vote headed for first-ever runoff between centrist, right-wing candidates
After a lackluster campaign overshadowed by a looming economic collapse, Bolivians voted on Sunday for a new president and parliament in elections that could see a right-wing government elected for the first time in over two decades.
A well-known figure in Bolivian politics, Jorge "Tuto" Quiroga, 65, is a conservative candidate representing the Alianza Libre coalition. He briefly served as president from 2001 to 2002 and has worked as an IMF consultant and a mining executive.
23hon MSN
What to know about Bolivia’s election that elevated a centrist shaking up the political landscape
One candidate is Rodrigo Paz, a conservative centrist senator and son of a neoliberal ex-president who is pitching himself as a moderate reformer.
Bolivia’s charismatic, long-serving ex-President Evo Morales told The Associated Press on Saturday that he didn’t know what to do about threats by the right-wing presidential candidates to arrest him if they came to power.
Siendo un policía en la ciudad boliviana de Santa Cruz, Edman Lara saltó a la fama publicando historias sobre la corrupción policial en
Scientists found a “large”-eyed creature with “long” toes in a “swampy forest” of Bolivia and discovered a new species, a study said. Photo from Moravec, Farková, Vences and Köhler (2025), shared by co-authors
Bolivia’s richest man went all out in this election cycle to publicly back a candidate that he thought could win the vote, unseat the ruling socialists and lift the nation out of acute economic crisis.
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