Will the Honduran general election be conducted fairly?

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TEGUCIGALPA — In the shadow of the June 2009 coup that ousted leftist president Manuel Zelaya from office, Hondurans will vote on Sunday to determine whether Zelaya’s wife, Xiomara Castro de Zelaya will become the Central American country’s new president.honduras flag icon

Despite a polarizing three-way campaign that pits the Zelayas against the two traditional Honduran political parties, with stark divisions over economic and security policy, how secure can Honduras and the region be that the vote will be essentially free and fair — and that the ballots will be counted fairly?

Candidates on both the left and the right bluster that they don’t fear electoral fraud, confident that their mandate will be strong enough for a clear victory.  But though international observers and representatives from each of Honduras’s political parties will be on hand to observer the counting on Sunday, there remains a nagging fear that a narrow election victory by any of the major presidential candidates would cause a political crisis, given the low level of public trust in Honduran public institutions.  Recently, U.S. congressmen Raúl M. Grijalva, Mike Honda and Hank Johnson wrote a letter to Secretary of State John Kerry warning of possible fraud:

“We are particularly alarmed to learn that the ruling party, and its presidential candidate Mr. Juan Orlando Hernández, now dominates all the key institutions of the government, including the country’s electoral authority and the military, which distributes the ballots,” they wrote, “leaving scarce recourse for Honduran citizens should fraud be committed in the electoral process, or human rights violations continue to threaten open debate.  This is particularly troubling given the long history of electoral fraud in Honduras, including allegations of widespread fraud during the primary elections in November of 2012.”

In those primary elections, Hernández narrowly defeated popular Tegucigalpa mayor Ricardo Álvarez for the presidential nomination of the conservative National Party, but refused to brook the ballot recount that Álvarez’s campaign requested.  Though the two candidates have long since united, no one can say with certainty that Hernández actually won the vote, and that’s left some doubt about the capacity of the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE) to guarantee ballot sanctity in Sunday’s general elections.

Though Central America isn’t necessarily always on the front pages, Honduras’s election is especially important to the United States.  The 2009 coup was one of the first foreign policy crises for U.S. president Barack Obama, and the United States has devoted increasing military aid in the attempt to combat drug trafficking in Honduras.  Moreover, Honduras’s general election is the first of four that will be held over the next six months in Central America – El Salvador, Costa Rica and Panama will all choose new presidents between now and May 2014.

Dr. Leo Valladares, a former Honduran commissioner of human rights and a former member of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, agreed with the warnings about potential ballot abuse.  “There are possibilities for fraud,” Valladares admitted. “In theory, the National Party could win without fraud. But they’re not secure, so they might commit fraud. Whatever the outcome of the election, it will be very conflicted.”

Hernández’s chief rivals in Sunday’s vote are Mauricio Villeda, the candidate of the more centrist Liberal Party, a Tegucigalpa attorney and the son of former president Ramón Villeda Morales (1975-63), and Castro de Zelaya who, with her husband, left the Liberal Party to form the new leftist Party of Liberty and Refoundation (LIBRE) in 2011.

Jacobo Hernández Cruz, a former vice president and former TSE head, however, argued that over the past decade, Honduran electoral authorities have made great strides toward enhancing electoral transparency.

“The only way there can be fraud [previously] is in null votes,” Hernández said.  “But now when they count, everyone can see.  This has been the case for eight years.  Open doors and open windows, everyone can see.  It’s out in public.”

Historically, transparency and observation of the vote count represents the greatest check against vote fraud in Honduran elections.  But other concerns remain, especially over how the ballot boxes arrive to the polling stations.

“The boxes come with the electoral custodian,” Hernández said. “The armed forces bring them. There is always trust in the armed forces.  The ballots are going to be scanned. There’s a procedure for how this will be done.”

Critics allege that, to the contrary, it’s far too easy for corrupt military officials to stuff ballot boxes with fraudulent votes prior to delivering the boxes on election day, and that electronic voting could eliminate that possibility.  But Hernández said that the economic costs of deploying e-voting technology to rural areas made that prohibitively expensive, noting that regionally, Brazil and Venezuela alone have been able to afford electronic voting.  Other countries, from Paraguay to Mexico, are planning to roll out further e-voting schemes in the future.

Germán Leitzelar, a congressman from the small Innovation and Unity Party (PINU) and a former labor minister, dismissed the risk of fraud.  Instead, he argued that the bigger challenge is campaign finance reform.  In a country with a history of government capture, first by multinational banana companies in the early- and mid-20th century and now by powerful drug traffickers, there are no laws requiring presidential or congressional candidates to disclose their donors or the amount of money that they’ve raised.  Leitzelar said campaign finance laws are an urgent priority for Honduras, including a ceiling on campaign donations to prevent donors from controlling future government policymaking.

“It’s embarrassing to see the roads covered in propaganda while there’s so much misery in this country,” Leitzelar said.  “It should be done through bank transfers, certified checks and in bank accounts of the parties and the candidates, supervised and watched by the banking commission and the election tribunal and organizations of civil society.  Making donations or contributions in cash should be forbidden. Whoever does receive and accept funds otherwise should be disqualified from the electoral process.”

Even aside from the technical process of a secure voting system and campaign finance, Rosemary Joyce, professor of anthropology and social sciences at the University of California, Berkeley, who co-authors the Honduras Culture and Politics blog, cautioned that there’s a broader question about whether a truly fair election can be conducted under an atmosphere of political fear.

“For ‘free and fair’ elections, candidates need to be able to campaign without being killed or threatened– and LIBRE candidates, in particular, have been targets for both threats and violence,” Joyce said in an e-mail interview. “Also part of creating a ‘free and fair’ election is ensuring that people do not feel they cannot safely exercise their right to vote. In 2009, Hondurans exercising their right to protest on election day were attacked fairly violently; there is no reason to think that cannot happen again. The creation of the new military police is quite troubling from this perspective.”

Photo credit to Efrain Salgado / EPA.

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