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LA PAZ, Dec. 20 (Xinhuanet) -- Evo Morales, the
candidate of the left wing Socialist Movement appears to have the majority
required to become president, after a count of 51.2 percent of the vote, the
National Electoral Court (CNE) said on Tuesday.
The electoral body said that Morales had so far won 50.08 of the vote. He needed to win 50
percent of the vote, plus one vote, to become president.
After the CNE report, Morales went to meet with Jorge
Quiroga, candidate for the right-wing Democratic and Social Power, who had won
32.2 percent of the vote, and Samuel Doria Mendina who won 8.75 percent.
Bolivian law says that if a president does not win an
absolute majority, the country's Congress gets to choose between the candidates.
In recent years the Congress has chosen the less
popular candidate of the two, resulting in weak presidents who were easily
ousted, usually in street protests against their governments' pro-US and
pro-globalization policies. The winner of Sunday's election will be Bolivia's
fourth president in three years.
Morales was born in 1959 in an indigenous family in
Isallavi, Bolivia, and finished 11th grade in high school. He worked as a
herdsman and a farmer in his early years and joined the military service at age
16.
In October 2003, Morales was instrumental in leading
mass protests that led to Sanchez de Lozada's resignation in the so-called "gas
wars." Morales has now become both a key and controversial figure in Bolivian
politics. Enditem |