Guatemala Ushers In a New Power Base
- Share via
GUATEMALA CITY — A Guatemalan opposition candidate whose party was created by a former military dictator was headed for a landslide victory Sunday in a run-off vote to elect the country’s first president since the end of a bloody civil war, early official results showed.
With just more than 14% of the vote counted, Alfonso Portillo of the right-wing Guatemalan Republican Front had 62.1% of the vote, compared with 37.9% for Oscar Berger of the ruling pro-business Party for the National Advancement, electoral officials said.
Portillo, a charismatic former professor and the son of a teacher, claimed victory late Sunday.
Berger, meanwhile, conceded defeat before downcast supporters. “I hope the Guatemalan people have not made a mistake,” he said.
President Alvaro Arzu, who is constitutionally barred from running, acknowledged his candidate’s defeat.
If the results are confirmed, Portillo will take over Jan. 14 from Arzu, whose government ended a 36-year civil war after signing a peace accord with leftist rebels in 1996 but failed to deliver better living conditions to the majority poor.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.