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Bolivia's president promises public votes on fuel subsidies and constitutionality of reelection

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Bolivia's president promises public votes on fuel subsidies and constitutionality of reelection
News

News

Bolivia's president promises public votes on fuel subsidies and constitutionality of reelection

2024-08-07 10:50 Last Updated At:11:01

LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) — Bolivia's socialist President Luis Arce said Tuesday national referenda would be held soon on the removal of politically combustible fuel subsidies and on the constitutionality of presidential reelections, offering for the first time a concrete path out of the country's economic morass and political limbo.

Arce did not give a date for the votes in his speech from Sucre, the southern historical capital, as Bolivia marked the 199th anniversary of its independence. He defended the referenda proposal as a way to dispel some of the uncertainty Bolivians have endured for months, promising that the populist gesture wasn't about “electoral calculations or personal ambitions.”

“It's time for the people, together with their government, to choose the path we wish to follow in view of the bicentennial,” Arce said.

A plan to vote on the elimination of fuel subsidies comes as incensed truckers and other protesters have blockaded roads leading to Bolivian cities in recent weeks over the scarcity of diesel, which is more than 80% imported. Fuel shipments from Bolivia's key ally Russia were stranded by a rainstorm last week at a Chilean port, adding to pressures on Arce's administration.

The government has nearly gone bankrupt importing and heavily subsidizing fuel. Bolivia would need $10 million a day to keep importing gasoline at international prices, selling it at half the price and remaining solvent, energy analyst Raul Velasquez said.

Without exporting natural gas anymore — once the mainstay of its booming economy — Bolivia is burning through its foreign currency reserves.

But curtailing the long-established subsidies risks triggering catastrophic price shocks — and further inflaming outrage among Bolivians already beset with economic woes.

The official exchange rate between the boliviano and the U.S. dollar has effectively collapsed. The black market rate has surged 50% above the official one. In his speech, Arce also said he would convene business leaders for discussions on whether to devalue the local currency.

Arce also announced a referendum on whether and how former presidents may seek reelection, an apparent attempt to resolve a dispute with powerful former President Evo Morales.

Arce's erstwhile mentor and ally, Morales has declared his intent to run against Arce in 2025 presidential elections — which Arce insists is unconstitutional.

Standing for more than two consecutive terms is prohibited under Bolivian law. But Morales managed to serve three terms as president, from 2006-2019, because of a legal loophole.

Morales' bid for a fourth term — which the constitutional court actually allowed at the time even though he lost a referendum on extending term limits — prompted allegations of fraud and unleashed mass unrest that compelled the leftist leader to resign and flee the country in 2019.

Morales' power struggle with Arce since returning home to Bolivia and launching a comeback has created a rolling political crisis that has paralyzed the country’s Congress, sunk plans to lure foreign investors to tap Bolivia’s vast lithium reserves and blocked the government from taking on foreign debt that would alleviate the cash crunch.

“To ensure that political actors do not once again affect the stability and economy of Bolivian families, it's important to clarify the nature of reelection," Arce said, without giving further details about the public vote. It wasn't clear whether the referendum would involve changing the constitution ahead of next year's elections.

Although Independence Day speeches may typically offer leaders a chance to reflect on the year's political accomplishments, President Arce took the occasion to detail his many woes: Bolivia's fall in natural gas production, legislative gridlock, foreign currency shortage — even, he said, “the climate crisis."

His critics showed little pity.

“The president again blames Congress for the country’s crisis and avoids assuming responsibilities,” opposition lawmaker Jairo Quinteros said.

Bolivia's anniversary comes just over 40 days after an alleged botched military coup brought the country to a standstill.

It remains unclear what exactly transpired on June 26 when General Juan José Zúñiga stormed the government headquarters surrounded by military vehicles and briefly faced down Arce before being dismissed and arrested, his alleged overthrow plot vanquished.

Arce — who has denied an eruption of allegations that he masterminded the coup to boost his own political fortunes — shed no more light on the matter Tuesday.

What has become clearer, analysts say, is that Bolivia's economic and political crisis has only worsened.

The sight of tanks ramming into the presidential palace last month didn't quite help restore investor confidence. And amid the Independence Day festivities, trucks and buses idled for hours outside gas stations as the much-anticipated Russian fuel delivered last week failed to relieve the dire shortages.

Few expect the promise of a referendum to solve the country's problems.

“Arce has opted to get rid of his problems, to pass the hot potato onto others by asking the people to find the solution,” prominent Bolivian political analyst José Luis Bedregal said. “A new scenario has opened that will further complicate the political debate.”

Follow AP's regional coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/latin-america

FILE - Bolivian President Luis Arce addresses an assembly of farm workers from the Confederation of Intercultural People of Bolivia in La Paz, Bolivia, Oct. 3, 2023. (AP Photo/Juan Karita, File)

FILE - Bolivian President Luis Arce addresses an assembly of farm workers from the Confederation of Intercultural People of Bolivia in La Paz, Bolivia, Oct. 3, 2023. (AP Photo/Juan Karita, File)

LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) — Bolivia's hugely popular former leftist president, Evo Morales, on Monday called on supporters to take to the streets in protest against his bitter political rival, current President Luis Arce, who hours earlier accused Morales on national TV of trying to overthrow him.

Morales’ appeal to Bolivia’s farmers, miners and peasants followed President Arce's unprecedented televised speech late Sunday lambasting his former mentor. Accusing Morales of trying to sabotage his administration and undermine democracy, Arce escalated a high-stakes power struggle that has pushed Bolivia to the brink.

“Enough, Evo!” Arce exclaimed. “Until now, I have tolerated your attacks and slander in silence. But putting the lives of the people at risk is something I cannot tolerate.”

Arce, who took office in 2020 and has struggled to govern with his ruling party riven by disagreements, alleged that Morales’ attempts to mobilize popular support and run in Bolivia’s presidential election next year was “putting democracy at risk."

"You are threatening the entire country," Arce said, alleging Morales sought to return to power by “means fair or foul."

His dramatic speech dredged up the chaos and bloodshed of 2019, when Morales ran for an unconstitutional third term and won. After accusations of fraud sparked mass protests, Morales resigned under pressure from the army, in what his supporters call a coup, and went into exile. At least 36 people were killed in the ensuing crackdown by security forces.

Morales, who served as Bolivia’s first Indigenous president, has vowed to unleash unrest if he is stopped from running in the elections scheduled for August 2025.

Ever since the constitutional court last year barred the leftist icon from running for president, the coca cultivators, Indigenous groups and miners — whom Morales represented during his presidency from 2006 to 2019 — have repeatedly come to his defense with street protests, marches and road blockades.

Morales encouraged the international community to follow his so-called “March to Save Bolivia" on Tuesday from the southeast village of Caracollo to Bolivia's administrative capital of La Paz. He described the march — 85 kilometers (53 miles) by foot along a highway — as a natural expression of protest against the failure of Arce’s government to fix the worsening economic crisis.

Firing back at Arce, he insisted Monday he had no selfish ulterior motives.

“The march is the response of a people fed up with their unthinking government, which has maintained absolute silence in the face of the crisis, corruption and the destruction of stability,” Morales wrote on social media platform X. “President Arce is not only desperate, but also confused.”

Over the past year, the Arce-Morales rift has increasingly polarized the country, tainting Bolivia’s politics and creating a sense of turmoil that soldiers sought to seize upon in June in an alleged coup attempt.

On Monday, peasants and workers flocked to the main road leading to Bolivia’s tourist hotspot of Lake Titicaca, cutting off traffic under the watchful gaze of riot police and calling on Arce to resign.

“It’s an incompetent government that we have, and it won’t solve the economic crisis,” said Pablo Merma, a peasant leader of the so-called Red Ponchos, radical Indigenous activists from the high plains who rallied Monday against the president. “We are not afraid of you, Arce.”

Although Arce was Morales’ former economy minister and his candidate in Bolivia’s 2020 elections, the erstwhile allies began vying for power after Morales’ 2021 political comeback.

Bolivia’s political stagnation and profound economic crisis — with fuel scarce and and the central bank dangerously short on foreign currency reserves — has caused some Bolivians once outraged over Morales’ strongman tendencies to grow nostalgic for the ex-leader’s transformation of Bolivia’s economy and remarkable reduction of poverty.

Rocks block a highway towards Lake Titicaca in Vilaque on the outskirts of El Alto, Bolivia, Monday, Sept. 16, 2024. The rocks were placed by people protesting for the resignation of Bolivian President Luis Arce for his management of the economy. (AP Photo/Juan Karita)

Rocks block a highway towards Lake Titicaca in Vilaque on the outskirts of El Alto, Bolivia, Monday, Sept. 16, 2024. The rocks were placed by people protesting for the resignation of Bolivian President Luis Arce for his management of the economy. (AP Photo/Juan Karita)

Rocks block a highway towards Lake Titicaca in Vilaque on the outskirts of El Alto, Bolivia, Monday, Sept. 16, 2024. The roadblock was placed by protesters demanding the resignation of Bolivian President Luis Arce for his management of the economy. (AP Photo/Juan Karita)

Rocks block a highway towards Lake Titicaca in Vilaque on the outskirts of El Alto, Bolivia, Monday, Sept. 16, 2024. The roadblock was placed by protesters demanding the resignation of Bolivian President Luis Arce for his management of the economy. (AP Photo/Juan Karita)

Police keep protesters from blocking more lanes as they protest for the resignation of Bolivian President Luis Arce for his management of the economy in Corapata, on the outskirts of El Alto, Bolivia, Monday, Sept. 16, 2024. (AP Photo/Juan Karita)

Police keep protesters from blocking more lanes as they protest for the resignation of Bolivian President Luis Arce for his management of the economy in Corapata, on the outskirts of El Alto, Bolivia, Monday, Sept. 16, 2024. (AP Photo/Juan Karita)

Police patrol at a roadblock in Vilaque on the outskirts of El Alto, Bolivia, Monday, Sept. 16, 2024. The roadblock was placed by protesters demanding the resignation of Bolivian President Luis Arce for his management of the economy. (AP Photo/Juan Karita)

Police patrol at a roadblock in Vilaque on the outskirts of El Alto, Bolivia, Monday, Sept. 16, 2024. The roadblock was placed by protesters demanding the resignation of Bolivian President Luis Arce for his management of the economy. (AP Photo/Juan Karita)

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