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News > Latin America

Carlos Alvarado is Elected President of Costa Rica

  • Costa Rica's President-elect Carlos Alvarado Quesada

    Costa Rica's President-elect Carlos Alvarado Quesada | Photo: Reuters

Published 1 April 2018
Opinion

Carlos Alvarado Quesada from the ruling center-left Citizen Action Party (PAC) has been elected with more than 60 percent of the vote.

Former government minister and author, 38-year-old Carlos Alvarado Quesada, from the ruling center-left Citizen Action Party (PAC) has been elected president of Costa Rica with more than 60 percent of the vote.

RELATED: 
Costa Ricans Wait for Results in Close Presidential Election

Alvarado Quesada defeated 43-year-old Fabricio Alvarado Munoz, a right-wing journalist and evangelical preacher from the National Restoration Party (PRN). The latter received just about 39 percent of the vote with 95 percent of all the polls accounted for.

The turnout figures reported about 62 percent of eligible voters. 

The polls closed at 6 p.m. in Costa Rica with more than 3 million voters, 31,864 of whom live abroad, voting to elect the president for the next four years.

The Supreme Electoral Tribunal's President Luis Antonio Sobrado said that the day was largely uneventful, without any significant incidents arising.

 

The electoral authorities expects to record a higher abstention rate than the 35 percent registered in the first round, based on past election trends paired with the Easter holiday.

Costa Ricans had begun voting at 6:00 am Sunday in one of the closest recorded presidential elections in several decades. 

A second-round poll was required to determine whether Alvarado Munoz or Alvarado Quesada – no relation – would become the next Costa Rican president.

RELATED:
Costa Rica Poll: Second Round to Kick off as Diaspora Votes

Both candidates faced off in the hotly contested race which was hinged on gender diversity.

Leading up to Sunday's run-off, pre-election polls had routinely reported a technical tie between Alvarado Munoz and Alvarado Quesada, with about 20 percent of eligible voters still undecided.

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