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...“Noboa is easy to beat,” said Mauricio Morales, a mechanic. “The right has only brought crime and decay to Ecuador.”...
...Marc Filippino So, Chris, what was the morale like in the places that you visited? Christopher Miller Ahead of the counteroffensive, morale was high....
...Morales, one of Latin America’s most prominent leftists and indigenous politicians, has been a vocal defender of Castillo since his arrest. Otárola accused Morales of stoking unrest....
...“The political rhetoric around immigration is escalating right now around Europe, which underscores the difficulties many member states are having coming up with coherent solutions,” says Alberto-Horst Neidhardt...
Region’s economic troubles bring public unrest in Chile, Argentina and Venezuela
...Foreign minister Karen Longaric told the Financial Times that La Paz had not been able to stop Argentina’s Peronist president, Alberto Fernández, and his administration from “disagreeable meddling in Bolivia...
...accompanied by Alberto Férnandez, Argentina’s leftist president, who has hosted him in Buenos Aires for the past year....
...President Alberto Fernández plans to reform the judiciary, but critics see a thinly-veiled attempt to stymie 11 corruption investigations into Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, the country’s powerful vice-president...
...“He is much more in the image of [former Bolivian president] Evo Morales.”...
...Alberto Fernández, Argentina’s president, invited the former Bolivian leader exiled in Buenos Aires to a celebration dinner on Monday last week....
...From exile in Argentina, where he fled after mass protests over allegations of election fraud forced him from power last year, Mr Morales is pushing the candidacy of his former finance minister, Luis Alberto...
...“Alberto is someone who knows how to get out of a tight spot,” she said. “He has been besieged before, and look where he is now. He is very pragmatic.”...
...Populist left-winger Evo Morales claimed victory for a fourth term in Bolivia last week amid opposition accusations of electoral fraud....
...Bolivia’s Evo Morales fled to Mexico amid violent protests earlier this month....
...Alberto Ramos of Goldman Sachs thinks the protests have implications for markets across the region and beyond....
...Bolivia’s Evo Morales fled to Mexico amid violent protests this month....
...No surprise that his replacement, leftist leader Alberto Fernández, is skipping this Davos....
...Bolivians will begin the week awaiting news about whether Evo Morales, the country’s first indigenous president, has secured enough of the vote in Sunday’s election to prevent a runoff in December against...
...“Latin America is up in arms, all the way from the southern cone to Mexico,” says Alberto Ramos, head of Latin American economics at Goldman Sachs in New York....
...Announcing the expulsion, Mr Morales charged that the UN body had “repeatedly violated the human rights of Guatemalans” and complained of “selective and partial justice”....
...So last week’s vote may have been merely symbolic — but for Italy’s emboldened Eurosceptics, however, it was a morale boost....
...Briefly noted A Bolivian court has ruled that President Evo Morales can run for a fourth term....
...Briefly noted Peru’s supreme court on Wednesday annulled former president Alberto Fujimori’s pardon and ordered that he be arrested and sent back to prison....
...Meanwhile in Bolivia President Evo Morales is pursuing a fourth term in office next year, despite a 2016 referendum in which voters said he should not be allowed to run again....
...the red wine was already on the tables: in front of a cheerful and admiring lunchtime crowd in the Circolo Vie Nuove, a leftwing social club in Florence, Matteo Renzi could savour a desperately needed morale...
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