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The subsidy for the left competitor, Luisa Gonzalez, sees the neck and neck with the current President Daniel Nuboa.
The current right president is scheduled to appear Daniel Nuboa and his leftist rival Louisa Gonzalez in the second round of Ecuador’s presidential elections, with preliminary results that show the neck and neck.
The National Electoral Council (CNE) announced that with 80 percent of the votes of the first round vote on Sunday, Nooboa had 44.4 per cent. Gonzales closely followed, with 44.1 percent out of 44.1 percent.
The other 14 candidates in the race, who are dominated by a security crisis, retreated from drugs.
“If this trend is preserved, the Ecuadorians will return to the ballot box on April 13,” Diana Atamant, CNE president, told a press conference.
The 47 -year -old Gonzalez’s performance, a political ingenuity of former President Rafael Correa from the left -wing Citizen Revolution Movement party, was a surprise, driven by support.
Eldated supporters told Kito that the race was a “statistical tie”, adding that they achieved a “great victory.”
“We won.”
The pre -election polls predicted a stronger result for Nubua, the 37 -year -old son of the billionaire banana pole, who took office 14 months ago to end his predecessor.
He hoped to get 50 percent of the sounds needed to avoid a face -to -face competition.
However, the supporters of the job operator were cheerful on Sunday, as they lit fireworks in Kito and Goyakil, the two largest cities in the country.
“We came to support the president, we want to support us and change the country,” said Secretary Miriam Midrano, 52, in Kito.
The competition was widely seen as a referendum on the country’s stalled economy and the Nuboa Iron-or Mano’s approach-the crime in the face of high killing, kidnapping and extortion led by drug gangs.
Noboa has taken bold executive measures to eliminate violent crimes, including declaring a state of emergency and deploying the army in the streets.
Human rights groups claim that the aggressive use of the armed forces has led to ill -treatment, including the killing of four children whose charred bodies were found near the army base.
On Electoral Day, Nubua deployed armed soldiers with weapons at polling stations throughout the country and closed the borders with Colombia and Peru.
Nubua was also involved in a long -term spit with his vice president, the last of which is whether he could take the campaign’s vacation and how he could.
This week, the Constitutional Court ruled two unique decisions that Nuboa used to take the campaign’s leave in the first round of the elections. This is likely to hold his ability to nominate the temporary vice president and the campaign before running.