The head of the right has a period of four years to implement the promises to collect crime and improve the economy.
The right -wing president of Ecuador, Daniel Nnovera, has been re -elected in a second round of round elections.
The National Electoral Council declared Sunday night that the headline, who has promised to promote the marked economy and a continuous offensive against the violence of the poster, had won by a wide margin.
With more than 90 percent of the tickets counted, it was reported that Nevoa, 37, had tasks of 55.8 percent of the votes. That cools an advantage of twelve points over leftist opponent Luisa González.
However, his rival, whose support surveys had suggested that he was running near the headline, has demanded a count, claiming that the vote was fraudulent.
Nnovera, who was chosen in the elections to the snapshots in 2023, now has a full four -year mandate to continue his divisive “hard hand” (hard) offensive against the violence linked to traffic or the color of cocaine and Peru. The smuggling and associated crime have ruined Ecuador since 2021.
“Ecuadorians have ghosts. From the morning of tomorrow, we will go to work,” said Novoa told the followers a letter speech in his hometown of Olon. Hello, he also criticized the accusations of fraud of his opponent.
González, who could have read in the surveys for his close links with the former president of the populist fire brands Rafael Correa, told singers’ supporters that the result was “the worst and most grotesque electoral fraud in the history of Ecuador.”
The results were a surprise for many after the first round in February, in which Noboa finished only 16,746 votes ahead of González. The candidate for the letter had the support of Leonidas Iza, a powerful indigenous leader who obtained more than half a million votes in the first round.
But voters were very concerned about increasing drug -related violence. The nation that was once pending averaged a murder every hour at the beginning of the year, since the posters competed for the control of the cocaine routes that pass through the ports of Ecuador.
The broken blood spill has scared investors and tourists equally, feeding the economic and swollen discomfort of the ranks of the poor of Ecuador to 28 percent of the population.
Nemaa, heir to a family fortune built on banana trade, had rethink his political fortune in the difficult security policies since he came to power 16 months ago, deploying the military in the streets, the drug captain and inviting al.