Briefings & Intelligence
19-05-2015: Latin American Economy Business report
Education – Latin America’s big problem
- LatinNews
Briefings & Intelligence
14-05-2015: Latin American Weekly Report
Bachelet, unlike Rousseff, tries to grasp the nettle
Pushed against the ropes, Chile’s President Michelle Bachelet has come out swinging, replacing her most senior cabinet ministers, announcing plans for a constitutional reform and rushing out an anti-corruption initiative. Bachelet could never have predicted such a precipitate fall in popularity, to just 29%, barely a year after taking office with an emphatic 62% of the vote to secure a second term. Bachelet’s proactive response stands in stark contrast, however, to that of Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff, who is suffering a similar fate – a sharp decline in popularity in the wake of a serious corruption scandal and being beset by economic and political difficulties – but has looked paralysed.
- LatinNews
Briefings & Intelligence
07-05-2015: Latin American Weekly Report
Costa Rica’s opposition unites to isolate Solís
Costa Rica’s President Luis Guillermo Solís cut a lonely figure as he delivered his state-of-the-nation address to the 57-seat unicameral legislative assembly on 1 May. Solís became the first representative of the centre-left Partido Acción Ciudadana (PAC) to don the presidential sash a year earlier, breaking a political duopoly that had held sway over Costa Rican politics since 1930. But with the PAC winning just 13 seats, Solís faced being hamstrung unless his government could display a striking aptitude for consensus-building with the eight opposition parties in the legislative assembly. It has failed in this regard. Six of these parties just forged an alliance to control the legislative leadership positions, marginalising the PAC, and leaving Solís and his government’s reform agenda high and dry.
- LatinNews
Briefings & Intelligence
30-04-2015: Latin American Weekly Report
Honduran supreme court lifts constitutional ban on re-election
Events in Honduras in late April have begun to look like a mirror image (that is, an image in reverse) of those that led in June 2009 to the ouster of President Manuel Zelaya (2006-2009). The constitutional panel of the supreme court has ruled ‘inapplicable’ the very constitutional provisions whose violations by Zelaya triggered his removal from office. As in 2009, the course of current events has been anything but straightforward — to the point that Zelaya has become one of the most vocal critics of the court’s ruling, on the grounds that it is “illegal and arbitrary”.
- LatinNews
Briefings & Intelligence
23-04-2015: Latin American Weekly Report
Farc attack damages Santos and guerrillas
Colombia’s President Juan Manuel Santos is resisting intense pressure to suspend the peace process with the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (Farc). Renewing aerial bombing was his immediate response to the killing of 11 soldiers in a military patrol by Farc guerrillas on 14 April but as details of the savagery of the attack which violated the terms of the indefinite unilateral ceasefire declared by the Farc last December have come to light public indignation has mounted and Santos was compelled to deliver a strong message demanding that the Farc pick up the pace of negotiations and show a genuine commitment to peace. The Farc can risk pushing Santos but if the public attitude hardens against a peace deal then whatever is agreed in Cuba will be academic when it comes to an eventual referendum on the accord.
- LatinNews
Briefings & Intelligence
18-04-2015: Latin American Economy Business report
Saving the Petrossauro
- LatinNews