Uruguay election too close to call, electoral court says

  • Published
Supporters of National Party presidential candidate Luis Lacalle wait for the results after the second-round presidential election in MontevideoImage source, Reuters
Image caption,

The wait at the campaign headquarters of Mr Lacalle was tense

Uruguay's presidential election is too close to call, the South American country's electoral court says.

The provisional count gives conservative Senator Luis Lacalle Pou a narrow lead over his left-wing rival, Daniel Martínez.

The electoral court said the margin was so narrow it would not declare a winner until the official count had finished, which could take days.

Opinion polls had suggested a comfortable win for Mr Lacalle.

What are the results so far?

Provisional results suggest Mr Lacalle has won 48.7% of the votes, compared to 47.5% for Mr Martínez. The difference between the two candidates is currently 28,666 votes.

Image source, Reuters
Image caption,

Mr Lacalle says his lead is irreversible

The court said that the result was so close it would not declare a winner until it had gone through more than 35,000 ballots cast by voters who could not make it to their assigned polling station.

These votes take longer to check and the court said it could take until the end of the week for the official result to be announced.

What has been the reaction?

Supporters of Mr Lacalle had been confident of victory after opinion polls ahead of the election had given him a comfortable margin over Mr Martínez.

There were celebrations at Mr Lacalle's campaign headquarters at first but, as exit polls suggested the margin between the two rivals was much narrower than expected, the mood changed.

Image source, Reuters
Image caption,

There were celebrations among National Party backers as the first results came in

Mr Lacalle himself stopped short of claiming victory, although he said he considered his lead "irreversible". He also said he was disappointed that his rival from the governing Broad Front coalition had not admitted defeat.

"Sadly, the government candidate has not called us and has not recognised the irreversible result," he said four hours after the polls had closed.

Meanwhile, supporters of Mr Martínez were buoyed by the better-than-expected outcome of their coalition, which has been in power for the past 15 years.

Media caption,

Martínez celebrates preliminary results, but he appears to be behind Luis Lacalle

Mr Martínez jumped on to the stage and told them to "celebrate" but warned them not to engage in provocation or clashes with the rival party while they awaited the final result.

Who are the candidates?

National Party presidential candidate Luis Lacalle  speaks to his supporters after the second-round presidential election in Montevideo
Reuters
Luis Lacalle

National Party

  • 46years old

  • 26age at which he became a member of Congress

  • 1990-1995years his father was president

Source: BBC Monitoring

Mr Lacalle is conservative and very pro-business. He has campaigned on promises to observe fiscal responsibility and reactivate the economy, criticising the "reckless spending" of previous governments.

He says he plans to put more police on the streets but also wants to tackle the high cost of living through austerity measures.

His critics say his government plans could put at risk social programmes that currently benefit many Uruguayans.

AFP
Daniel Martínez

Broad Front

  • 62years old

  • 3 years 8 monthstime served as mayor of Montevideo

  • 14 yearstime his Broad Front coalition has been in power

Source: BBC Monitoring

Mr Martínez has promised to renew efforts to create jobs and fight inequality. His supporters say that during his time as mayor of Montevideo, he kept the capital's economy in surplus through cuts to subsidies and improved tax controls.

He has promised more surveillance cameras and community policing to tackle crime.