Guide: 2014 Elections in the Americas
Guide: 2014 Elections in the Americas
Eight countries in the Western Hemisphere will hold national-level elections in 2014:
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Collectively, these countries represent around 60 percent of the population of the Western Hemisphere. Voters will elect seven presidents and 1,699 legislators in total. AS/COA Online presents an overview of the region’s federal elections in 2014, along with the latest analysis, results, multimedia, and expert perspectives.
Costa Rica
Type: Presidential and Legislative
First Round: February 2, 2014
Runoff: April 6, 2014. A second round is held if a candidate fails to win more than 40 percent of votes during the first round. During the second round, the victor wins by a majority.
Inauguration: May 8, 2014
Number of Seats: In addition to the president, 57 members of Costa Rica’s unicameral Legislative Assembly will be elected for four-year terms. Reelection is allowed, but consecutive terms are not.
Terms: Presidents serve four-year terms and can be reelected, but cannot serve consecutive terms.
El Salvador
Type: Presidential
First Round: February 2, 2014
Runoff: March 9, 2014. If none of the candidates achieve an absolute majority (50 percent of the vote plus one), a second election is conducted no later than 30 days later. The candidate who garners the most votes wins the second round.
Inauguration: June 1, 2014
Terms: Presidents are elected for five-year terms without the possibility of consecutive re-election.
Colombia
Type: Legislative
Election Day: March 9, 2014
Number of Seats: The Senate holds 102 seats while the Chamber of Deputies houses 166. All seats are up for grabs each election cycle.
Start of Legislative Session: Elected officials will take office on July 20.
Terms: Colombia’s senators and representatives can serve an unlimited number of four-year terms.
Panama
Type: Presidential and Legislative
Election: May 4, 2014
Presidential Election: There is only one round of voting in the presidential election. The candidate who receives a plurality of votes takes office. Presidents are elected for five-year terms and must wait two terms to be eligible for reelection.
Inauguration: July 1, 2014
Number of Seats: 71 representatives in Panama’s unicameral Legislative Assembly will be elected for five-year terms, along with the president.
Terms: Presidents are elected for five-year terms and must wait two terms to be eligible for reelection. There are no term limits for National Assembly members.
Colombia
Type: Presidential
First Round: May 25, 2014
Runoff: June 15, 2014. A second round is held if a candidate fails to win more than 50 percent of votes during the first round. During the second round, the victor wins by majority.
Inauguration: August 7, 2014.
Terms: Presidents serve four-year terms, with the possibility of consecutive reelection.
Brazil
Type: Presidential and Legislative
First Round: October 5, 2014
Runoff: October 26, 2014. A runoff takes place if a candidate fails to receive more than 50 percent of the vote. The winning candidate in the second round must win an absolute majority.
Inauguration: The president takes office on January 1, 2015. The new legislative session starts on February 1, 2015.
Number of Seats: There are 513 seats in the Chamber of Deputies and 81 spots in the Senate. Deputies serve four-year terms, and all seats are up for a vote in 2014. Senators serve eight-year terms; a third of seats are up for a vote in 2014.
Terms: Presidents serve four-year terms with the possibility of consecutive reelection.
Bolivia
Type: Presidential and Legislative
First Round: October 12, 2014
Runoff: December 7, 2014. A runoff takes place if a candidate fails to win more than 50 percent of the vote, or 40 percent of the vote with a 10 percent lead over the second-place candidate. In a runoff, the candidate who gains the majority of the vote wins.
Inauguration: The president and legislators take office on January 22, 2015.
Number of Seats: The Chamber of Deputies will fill all 130 seats for five-year terms, and the Senate will elect all 36 members for five-year terms. Members of Congress are eligible for one consecutive reelection.
Terms: Presidents are permitted one consecutive reelection. However, in May 2013 a law was passed allowing President Evo Morales to run for reelection a second time.
Uruguay
Type: Presidential and Legislative
First Round: October 26, 2014
Runoff: November 30, 2014. A runoff is held on the last Sunday of November of the same year if no candidate garners an absolute majority in the first round.
Inauguration: March 1, 2015
Number of Seats: In Uruguay’s bicameral National Legislature, 30 senators and 99 representatives will be elected for five-year terms. There are no term limits for either the upper or lower houses. Also, the vice president serves as an ex officio member of the Senate, bringing to total number of senators to 31.
Terms: Presidents are elected for five-year terms, and may be re-elected but not for consecutive terms.
United States
Type: Legislative
Election Day: November 4, 2014
Number of Seats: All 435 seats are up for election in the House of Representatives, as well as 33 of the 100 Senate seats.
Start of Legislative Session: Newly elected legislators will take office on January 3, 2015.
Terms: Representatives are elected to two-year terms, with all seats up for grabs each election cycle. Senators, on the other hand, serve six-year terms with one-third of Senate seats up for renewal every two years. There are no congressional term limits in the U.S. Congress.
Editor's note: This guide originally incorrectly stated that seven countries in the Americas will hold elections in the 2014. As of the start of 2014, the number of countries with national elections planned is eight, with seven presidents and 1,699 legislators to be elected across these countries. This guide also incorrectly stated that Panama's presidential inauguration is September 1; the correct date is July 1. This guide was updated on May 2 to reflect Bolivia's exact election dates, announced on April 30.
2014 Election Guide Blog
AS/COA Online looks at the latest poll numbers, the leading presidential candidates, and election issues in the countries in the Americas holding federal-level elections in 2014.
2014 Election Blog: Costa Rica's One-Man Presidential Runoff
Ahead of the April 6 vote, only a single candidate remains in the running after the other one quit his campaign.
On April 6, Costa Ricans vote in a runoff to pick a president, even though only one candidate has been left standing.
During the first-round vote on February 2, Luis Guillermo Solís of the Citizens’ Action Party (PAC) came in first with 30.98 percent, despite the fact that he’d been polling fourth. The governing National Liberation Party (PLN)’s Johnny Araya came in second with 29.57 percent. Abstention outpaced the portion of the vote that each candidate earned, reaching nearly 32 percent. Because no candidate reached the required 40 percent, a runoff vote was set.
But on March 5, Araya announced that he would stop campaigning in the face of disappointing poll numbers. It was the first time in Costa Rican history that a candidate has dropped out of a presidential runoff. Legally, Araya cannot withdraw altogether from the race, and his name will appear on the ballot on Sunday. Solís must receive a simple majority of votes in order to win the second round.
Campaigning officially ended on March 30, as Solís called for 1 million votes to ensure he has a mandate at the end of the one-horse race. The PAC candidate is a former professor who has never held elected office, and ran on a platform of transparency and anti-corruption. Last week, PLN party leaders challenged PAC to a debate, but the PAC rejected the idea, saying there would be a time crunch due to the fact that April 2 marks the last day for debates.
Even though he stopped campaigning, Araya encouraged Costa Ricans to turn out to the polls.
Poll Update: Panama's Ruling-Party Candidate ahead in Possible Close Race
José Domingo Arias leads, but some surveys show a narrow gap with his main contender as the May 4 presidential election nears.
Panama’s national election takes place May 4, and the governing-party candidate leads polls in the race for the presidency. Still, some surveys show the frontrunner in a tight race or his top rival making gains.
One poll published this week by pollsters Dichter & Neir has José Domingo Arias of the ruling Democratic Change (CD) party with 39 percent of voter intention. That gives the former housing minister a seven-point lead over his top rival, Juan Carlos Navarro, ex-mayor of Panama City and candidate for the Democratic Revolutionary Party. But an Ipsos poll also released this week shows just a two-point difference, with Arias at 33 percent and Navarro at 31 percent. Both polls put Vice President and Panameñista Party candidate Juan Carlos Varela trailing in third at 26 percent.
Also a candidate in the last election, Varela joined current President Ricardo Martinelli’s ticket at the time and became the foreign relations minister, but the two had a falling out in 2011, when the president sacked Varela from his ministerial role during a dispute over electoral reform. This time around, the CD candidate didn’t split the ticket with another party; Arias’ partner in the race is First Lady Marta de Martinelli. The Dichter & Neir poll found that 56 percent of respondents consider her candidacy as vice president a form of reelection “in disguise” (presidents must sit out two terms before seeking to hold the top office again.). The same poll gives the president an approval rating of 63 percent, but Ipsos has the number at just 44 percent.
There is no runoff vote for Panama’s presidency, so whoever wins a relative majority of ballots will take over for a five-year term on July 1. But even though Arias holds the lead, this election’s not over yet, as the Ipsos poll shows. Moreover, La Prensa’s “Ruta 2014” maps out how Quantix Panama polls have Navarro gaining each month, with Arias’ lead narrowing from over 10 points in December to 5.6 points in March.
This month’s Quantix survey forecasts that 2 percent of ballots will be en blanco (left blank or destroyed) and showed that 2.4 percent of people polled either did not respond or remain undecided. Ipsos finds that 89 percent of its poll respondents plan to vote come May 4.
Poll Update: Surveying Brazil’s Presidential "Pre-Candidates"
President Dilma Rousseff maintains a lead over other contenders ahead of the October 5 vote.
On March 20, Ibope released a new poll ahead of Brazil’s October 5 presidential election. Though presidential candidacies will be officially announced in June, those named in the polls are referred to as “pre-candidates.” The survey found that President Dilma Rousseff of the Workers’ Party has 43 percent of the vote, with the Brazilian Social Democratic Party Senator Aécio Neves in second place with 15 percent. The Brazilian Socialist Party’s Eduardo Campos, governor of Pernambuco state, took the third spot with 7 percent.
Ibope also looked at a scenario that involved minority candidates, in which Rousseff would receive 40 percent, and other candidates would receive a combined total of 23 percent of the vote. In this case, Rousseff would be able to win in the first round with an absolute majority, because the percentage of votes for her would outnumber the combined percentage of votes for other candidates. If the vote went to a second round, Rousseff would win with a wide margin against Neves, Campos, or Marina Silva—Campos’ vice presidential pick. According to Ibope’s past polls, Rousseff has maintained a lead of between 8 and 46 points over the second-place candidate since March 2013.
In spite of the wide support for the president, the poll found that 64 percent of voters hope the next president “totally changes things” or “changes things a lot” during the next administration. Meanwhile 32 percent want to see things stay the same.
Poll Update: Colombia's Presidential Race Heats up
A new poll shows President Juan Manuel Santos in the lead, but with Green Alliance candidate Enrique Peñalosa gaining steam.
Ahead of Colombia’s presidential election on May 25, a new poll shows that while President Juan Manuel Santos is in the lead, he could face a close runoff.
Released March 16, the Datexco survey for El Tiempo and W Radio indicates that Santos is in first place with 25.5 percent of the vote, followed by the Green Alliance’s Enrique Peñalosa with 17.1 percent. Peñalosa, a former Bogota mayor, was chosen in a party primary on March 9 to run for president. The Democratic Center’s Oscar Iván Zuluaga—running on a ticket created by former President Álvaro Uribe— came in third with 14.6 percent. Clara López of the Democratic Pole/Patriotic Union alliance was in fourth place at 10.7 percent. Finally, the Conservative Party’s Marta Lucía Ramírez had 7.7 percent.
Because a candidate needs at least 50 percent of the votes to avoid a runoff, Datexco asked who voters would choose in the event of a second round. Santos would have an ample lead of at least 10 points over all of the candidates except for Peñalosa. In the case of a runoff between the president and the Green Alliance candidate, the survey shows that about 40 percent of voters would pick Peñalosa and 37 percent would choose Santos.
The poll showed a notable change from a previous survey in February: fewer voters said they planned to cast a blank vote. In February, nearly 42 percent said they would submit a blank vote, while in March, that number dropped to less than 17 percent.
2014 Election Blog: Winner Declared in El Salvador's Presidential Runoff
The ruling party candidate won by less than 6,400 votes, the country’s electoral authorities confirmed on March 16.
After a runoff vote that separated both candidates by less than 6,400 votes, El Salvador’s electoral authorities declared a winner a week after the election. On March 16, the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE) said that after a recount, the governing Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN)’s Salvador Sánchez Cerén defeated Norman Quijano of the Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA).
Declárese electo como Presidente de la República al señor Salvador Sánchez Cerén
— TSE El Salvador (@tse_elsalvador) March 17, 2014
The TSE also denied a petition by ARENA to annul the election results, after the party alleged voter fraud during the March 9 runoff. ARENA also appealed to the country’s constitutional court, which has yet to release a decision.
The recount results, which concluded on March 13, showed the same divide between the two candidates as the initial results: 50.11 percent for Sánchez Cerén and 49.89 percent for Quijano. This TSE chart shows the final vote breakdown.
The FMLN celebrated the recount results on March 15, and Sánchez Cerén thanked his supporters on Twitter after the TSE announcement on March 16.
¡Gracias pueblo salvadoreño! La victoria es nuestra #5Más #Adelante pic.twitter.com/uXOdeDNqIC
— Salvador Sánchez C. (@sanchezceren) March 17, 2014
Yesterday, Quijano maintained allegations of fraud, sharing a video on Twitter alleging manipulation during the final vote count.
En el escrutinio final, hemos visto como se han manipulado documentos de manera ilegal. Contemos voto por voto. http://t.co/bIUec64kZA
— Norman Quijano (@norman_quijano) March 16, 2014
Sánchez Cerén takes office on June 1 to serve a five-year term.
Despite major protests in Brazil last year, voters opted for the status quo. Writing for Quartz, AS/COA's Rachel Glickhouse outlines four theories why.
The election will help define Brazil’s important economic and foreign policy choices, writes COA’s Eric Farnsworth for World Politics Review.
With upcoming elections in both countries, social media has become a critical tool to reach voters, writes AS/COA's Rachel Glickhouse for U.S. News & World Report.