Bolivia heads to a presidential runoff
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Evo Morales, Bolivia's former president, has expressed uncertainty about threats from right-wing presidential candidates to arrest him if they gain power.
1 in 5 Bolivians spoiled their ballots – a sign of voter dissatisfaction as nation tips to the right
For the first time since returning to democracy, Bolivia’s presidential election heads to a runoff. But no left-wing candidate made it past the first round.
Early official result showed the ruling Movement for Socialism (MAS) on track for its worst election defeat in a generation.
Bolivia’s presidential election will head to a runoff after no candidate secured an outright victory during the first round Sunday.
Former Bolivian president Evo Morales has launched a campaign for a contender called “Nulo,” representing a null-and-void vote.
Despite being barred from running again for president and being sought for arrest, a towering figure of Bolivian politics is trying to rally supporters to cast null votes.
Ex-President Morales is credited with lifting millions out of poverty. But his political ambitions divide the left.
Bolivians on Monday began looking to a future without the ruling socialists of the past two decades, after the first round of presidential and parliamentary elections were won by a
The presidential election on Sunday could mean the end of a socialist era. Two right-leaning candidates are leading in the polls. And for the first time since Morales was elected president in 2005, neither he nor a stand-in will be on the ballot.