AS/COA Online presents an overview of the region’s national-level elections in 2014, along with the latest analysis, results, multimedia, and expert perspectives.

Guide: 2014 Elections in the Americas

Overview

Eight countries in the Western Hemisphere will hold national-level elections in 2014:

  • Bolivia (Presidential and legislative)
  • Brazil (Presidential and legislative)
  • Colombia (Presidential and legislative)
  • Costa Rica (Presidential and legislative)
  • El Salvador (Presidential)
  • Panama (Presidential and legislative)
  • Uruguay (Presidential and legislative)
  • United States (Legislative)

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.

Election Facts

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.

Blog

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 Elections Blog: Local Elections in the Americas

Submitted by rglickhouse on

Canada, Ecuador, Mexico, Nicaragua, and Peru will hold local-level votes this year. Find out which seats are up for grabs.

Along with the eight national-level elections taking place in the Western Hemisphere this year, a number of countries will also hold local elections. AS/COA Online outlines what seats are up for grabs throughout the Americas.

Explore by country:

Canada

Type: Municipal and Provincial

Dates: September 22, October 22, October 27, November 3, November 15, and December 8

Details: The province of New Brunswick will elect 49 members for four-year terms to the legislative assembly on September 22. Manitoba and Ontario hold municipal elections—including the vote for mayors and city councilors—on October 22 and October 27, respectively. British Columbia and Prince Edward Island hold municipal elections in November. Terms in British Columbia last for three years, while the other three provinces holding votes have four-year terms. Local-level elections in hamlets and rural municipalities take place in Saskatchewan on October 22 and in Northwest Territories and Nunavut on December 8.

Ecuador

Type: Municipal and Provincial

Date: February 23

Details: Ecuador elected 221 mayors and 46 provincial prefects, as well as local-level legislators for four-year terms. Learn more about the election from our election blog.

Mexico

Type: Municipal

Date: February 23, June 1, and July 6

Details: On July 6, the state of Coahuila will elect 25 local legislators, and the state of Nayarit will elect 30 local legislators and 20 mayors—all for three-year terms. Mayoral elections are taking place in a handful of municipalities in Oaxaca, Puebla, Tlaxcala, and Veracruz on different dates throughout the year. The government’s electoral calendar for this year is still being updated; for example, at the time of this report, voting dates for Puebla and Oaxaca had yet to be confirmed.

Nicaragua

Type: Local

Date: March 2

Details: Nicaragua’s two autonomous regions, the North Atlantic Autonomous Region and the South Atlantic Autonomous Region on the country’s Caribbean coast will hold elections for regional councils, which act as local legislatures. Each council has 45 members with four-year terms.

Peru

Type: Municipal and Regional

Date: March 16 and October 5

Details: Peruvians will elect 25 mayors and 169 city councilors in 39 districts on March 16. These elections are taking place to fill seats for those recalled in 2013. Those who win will only serve briefly, until the nationwide municipal elections toward the end of the year.

On October 5, elections will be held for 25 regional presidents (similar to governors), 195 provincial mayors, and 1,647 district mayors—all for four-year terms.

2014 Election Blog: Ecuador's Local Vote

Submitted by rglickhouse on

The opposition captured mayoralties in the country’s five biggest cities, though early results show the governing party won a majority of mayors’ seats.

On February 23, Ecuador held municipal and provincial elections to elect 221 mayors, 46 provincial prefects, and local-level legislators for four-year terms. In the biggest race—for the country’s key mayoral seats—the opposition made strides, taking five of Ecuador’s largest metropolitan areas and challenging President Rafael Correa’s bid to expand the influence of the ruling Country Alliance party.

Along with taking the prized capital of Quito, the opposition won the mayoralties of Cuenca, Santo Domingo de los Tsáchilas, Manta, and the president’s hometown of Guayaquil, exit polls show. Given Correa’s push for governing party candidates in Quito and Guayaquil, the results represent “a significant political blow” to Correa and his party, writes Latin America analyst James Bosworth.

Last week, Correa had claimed that losing Quito would make Ecuador “ungovernable” and said the winning candidate Mauricio Rodas was associated with Venezuela’s “right wing.” He said: “We will begin to see results like those in Venezuela, where [President] Nicolás Maduro faces opposition from Caracas itself every day,” referring to Venezuela’s ongoing protests.

The election also set the stage for the 2017 presidential vote, when Correa says he will not seek a fourth term. Sunday’s election could build support for a presidential opposition candidate, analysts told The Wall Street Journal. Nevertheless, the opposition remains fragmented, points out The Economist’s Americas View blog. Early results show that the Country Alliance won a majority of mayoralties, and Correa said his party could win up to 100 of the 221 mayoralties.

The vote also marked Ecuador’s first experiment with electronic voting. Voters in three provinces—around 10 percent of the country’s voter pool—cast a digital vote for the first time. The government hopes to expand the system to at least 50 percent of the country by 2017. The country’s electoral council said the electronic voting was a success, with early results available online. In this Andean country, voting is mandatory.

2014 Election Blog: Costa Rica and El Salvador Head for Runoffs

Submitted by rglickhouse on

The February 2 votes in both Central American countries saw significant abstention rates with no candidate winning enough votes to avoid a runoff.

Costa Rica and El Salvador held presidential elections on February 2, though in both countries, abstention rates were significant and no candidate received enough votes necessary to avoid a runoff.

In Costa Rica, the largest percentage of voters chose no one: an estimated 31.69 percent abstained and stayed home on election day. Prior to the vote, polls had showed a large percentage of undecided voters, between 30 and 40 percent.

Meanwhile, the candidate who received the most votes came as a surprise: it was Luis Solís of the Citizens’ Action Party (PAC)—at 30.98 percent—who polled fourth. Johnny Araya of the governing National Liberation Party (PLN) came in second with 29.57 percent of the vote. Because no candidate received the required minimum of 40 percent, Solís and Araya will head to a runoff on April 6.

Solís won the interior and highlands—including San José, where Araya served as mayor—and Araya won the coasts, reports La Nación.

Meanwhile, José María Villalta of the Broad Front (or FA), who had been polling second, came in third with 17.13 percent. In his concession speech, he said: “Nobody said it was a race; our fight isn’t short-term. It’s a process of persuasion.”

 

 

Araya also admitted that his party has work ahead. “There’s no doubt that the electoral result shows us we still haven’t given sufficiently clear signs that we want to change direction,” said a tweet via his profile.

 

 

Solís, meanwhile, celebrated his unexpected first-place finish, writing on Twitter: “Costa Rica isn’t the same as it was before 6pm today.”

 

 

In El Salvador, a close race ended without a candidate receiving the minimum 50 percent. The governing Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN)’s Salvador Sánchez Cerén came close, winning 48.92 percent. In a March 9 runoff he will face Norman Quijano of the Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA), who came in second with 38.95 percent.

Former President Antonio Saca of the UNIDAD coalition came in third with 11.44 percent, as this graphic from the Salvadoran electoral agency shows.

El Faro also provides a breakdown of the vote in this interactive graphic.

 

Sánchez Cerén celebrated his first-place finish, saying he would win by over 10 points in the second round. (Watch the video starting at 3:30:00)

 

 

Quijano asked for support in the second round, and noted that his party had done well under the circumstances—alleging that the FMLN and the electoral authorities were conspiring against him.

Saca conceded last night, recognizing the two other candidates’ victories in heading to a runoff.

 

 

Abstention rates ran high in El Salvador—between 45 and 50 percent. In a February 3 interview, Quijano said the real winner of the first round was abstention.

To see how the candidates are doing on social media, check out a report from La Prensa Gráfica.

2014 Election Blog: COA's Eric Farnsworth Analyzes Costa Rica and El Salvador Election Results

Submitted by mmasud on

COA's Vice President Eric Farnsworth analyzes the issues on voters' minds in the two Central American elections.

COA's Eric Farnsworth speaks with CCTV America about the close presidential races in Costa Rica and El Salvador, and what voters in both countries are looking for in the candidates as they head to the polls.

In El Salvador, voters are choosing based on "who can reduce violence, and who can create jobs, and who can improve the economy," Farnsworth explains. In Costa Rica, Farnsworth notes that rising income inequality has voters asking: "What do we do now, where do we go from here, and how do we create those jobs for the next generation?"

2014 Election Blog: El Salvador Prepares for a Close Presidential Competition

Submitted by netoniru on

Who are the candidates and can any of them win in the first round? Voters cast their ballots on February 2.

El Salvador's presidential candidates wrapped up their campaigns this week in preparation for the country's February 2 election. While there are several candidates in the running, the race is coming down to three main contenders. Who are they and can any of them get the required 50 percent of the vote to avoid a runoff election on March 9? AS/COA Online takes a look at the election.

 

The Candidates

  • Norman Quijano, a dentist by training and a former legislator, served as mayor of San Salvador from 2009 until he stepped down in August and became the Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA) candidate. Until 2009, right-leaning ARENA was El Salvador's governing party for 20 years. This week, ex-President Francisco Flores (1999-2004), a previous advisor to Quijano's campaign, attempted to flee the country amid a corruption investigation. The news has some wondering if the ARENA's presidential hopes could be harmed by the scandal.

    While mayor, Quijano drew both accolades and criticism for his government's cleanup of the capital's downtown area. Now, as a presidential candidate, Quijano's platform centers on job creation, economic growth, and security. His proposals range from revitalizing the country's agricultural sector to focusing on job creation for youth. They also include boosting small business and private-sector partnerships and seeking ways to attract investment from abroad, including from Salvadoran emigrants.

    Throughout the race, Quijano railed against El Salvador's two-year-old gang truce. As he closed his campaign, he called security the current administration's "biggest failure," saying the government "has tried to trick us by making us believe the truce was resolving insecurity." Some of his other specific security proposals include drafting ninis (youth who neither work nor study) into the army, as well as militarizing security and policing.

  • Antonio "Tony" Saca, president of El Salvador from 2004 to 2009, got his start as a sports radio journalist. He eventually headed the Salvadoran Association of Radio Broadcasters and the National Association of Private Enterprise in El Salvador. Saca represented ARENA while in office, but the party expelled him six months after his term ended. At the time, ARENA's leader accused him of causing party fractures, while investigative reports alleged his administration misappropriated funds.

    Still, Saca remained relatively popular during his presidency and left ARENA to join the Grand Alliance for National Unity (GANA). In this year's race, he became the candidate for UNIDAD, a coalition made up of GANA and other parties. Saca's proposals focus on strengthening ties with El Salvador's expat community, which has the right to participate in this year's election for the first time. The candidate also pledged expanded programs and credit for the agricultural sector, job creation for youth through private-sector partnerships, health care and development programs, investment, and elimination of bureaucracy. On the matter of security, Saca says he would improve opportunities for youth, boost communication between institutions, and increase police forces.

  • Salvador Sánchez Cerén is the candidate of the governing Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN). Once a teacher, he eventually became a commander in the FMLN when it was a leftist guerilla group during El Salvador's civil war, and was among those who signed the 1992 peace accords. He went on to serve in the Legislative Assembly before assuming the role of vice president and education minister in the current administration of President Mauricio Funes.

    While Sánchez Cerén could benefit from Funes' high approval ratings, some posit he may be harmed by the fact that he is seen as less moderate than the current president, although his candidate for vice president, Óscar Ortiz, is seen as a centrist. His proposals include improved consulates and investment opportunities for Salvadorans abroad, joining the Venezuela-backed Petrocaribe oil bloc, boosting education and health care programs, job creation, closing tax loopholes, and extending credits for the agricultural sector.

    When it comes to security, Sánchez Cerén has distanced himself from the gang truce, avoiding reference to it in his government plan and during the presidential debate. Instead, he pledges to offer better opportunities to youth and create a special institution dedicated to security. He proposes using "two hands"—one promoting education and prevention, the other being the "firm hand" of the state, "because we are not going to tolerate crime."

The Polls

El Salvador's election agency prohibited the publishing of polls too close to the vote, with January 18 as this round's cutoff date. A number of the polls give the edge to Sánchez Cerén, but with Quijano close behind and Saca third.

An El Diario de Hoy/Newlink poll released January 14 gave the vice president 37.9 percent, Quijano 33.9 percent, and Saca just 12.3 percent. But the same survey showed that, as far as the parties go, the FMLN is favored by just 0.1 percent over ARENA, and it gave Quijano 52.5 percent against 47 percent for Sánchez Cerén in a runoff. A poll released January 15 by the University of Central America (UCA) found that 37.2 percent of respondents view Sánchez Cerén as the best presidential candidate, compared with 30.5 percent for Quijano and 21.2 percent for Saca. In a runoff, UCA poll respondents said they would pick Sánchez Cerén (46.2 percent) over Quijano (39.6 percent). Finally, a Mitofsky poll gives the first-round win to Quijano (35.3 percent) over Sánchez Cerén (31.8 percent) and Saca (16 percent). With such close and conflicting numbers, a second round appears likely and the victor uncertain.

Top Issues for Voters

Crime, jobs, and finances dominate voter concerns. The latest UCA poll found that, at 51.5 percent, voters far and away consider insecurity the country's top problem, followed by gangs at 10.6 percent, and unemployment at 9.7 percent. The survey also found that, when considering candidates' proposals, respondents considered the fight against delinquency the most important (30.7 percent), keeping basic costs down in second place (21.3 percent), and job creation ranked third (20.9 percent).

Editor's Note: This article originally stated that ARENA presidents were in power for 15 years leading up to 2009. The correct figure is 20 years.

Analysis