Ecuador officials deny fraud claims in presidency vote

Ecuadorean presidential candidate for the CREO party Guillermo Lasso participates in a rally outside the National Electoral Council after a press conference of the President of Electoral Council Juan Pablo Pozo, in Quito on February 21, 2017. Ecuadoran officials denied claims of attempted fraud in a tightly-fought election as the last votes were counted Tuesday with the ruling socialists looking likely to face a hard-to-win runoff vote. Pozo said it could take until February 23 for the full results to be confirmed. / AFP

Ecuadoran officials denied claims of attempted fraud in a tightly fought election as the last votes were counted Tuesday with the ruling socialists looking likely to face a runoff vote.
With 97.2 percent of ballots counted from Sunday’s election, leftist ruling party candidate Lenin Moreno had 39.31 percent of the vote, according to the National Electoral Council. His conservative rival Guillermo Lasso had 28.25 percent.
To win, Moreno needs 40 percent of the votes and a margin of at least 10 percentage points over Lasso. The runoff would be held on April 2.

“There is a marked trend, and if that turns out to be the case there would be a runoff,” the president of the National Electoral Council, Juan Pablo Pozo, told a news conference.
He has said it could take until Thursday for the full results to be confirmed.
Lasso said he was confident there would be a runoff.
“That it should take three days to publish final results is an attempt at fraud and we are not going to allow that,” he wrote on Twitter.
The electoral council has denied any fraud took place. It insisted in a statement that it would “guarantee that the people’s will is respected.”
“Never in the history of the country have results come out less than 48 hours after the end of voting,” it said on Twitter.
Supporters of Lasso earlier scuffled with police as they gathered outside the electoral council, impatient at the delay.
Lasso called on people “not to give in to provocation.”
Political analyst Santiago Basabe of the social science institute FLACSO said it was “difficult for the current trend (towards a runoff vote) to be reversed.”
Opinion polls indicate Moreno may well lose a runoff in which supporters of other conservative opposition groups are likely to rally behind Lasso.
Sunday’s election was a test of the legacy of outgoing President Rafael Correa, Moreno’s more hardline ally, who is an outspoken critic of the United States.
Correa is leaving office at the end of his term after 10 years in power.
Ecuadorans voted on whether to continue Correa’s tax-and-spend policies or give Lasso a mandate to cut spending and taxes.
If ex-banker Lasso wins the presidency, another pillar of the Latin American left will swing to the right after Argentina, Brazil and Peru did so in recent months.
Lasso has also said he will consider ending WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange’s asylum in Ecuador’s London embassy.
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