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Bolivia leftist Rodriguez back in presidential race; Morales kept out

Bolivian Senate leader Andronico Rodriguez is eligible to run in the nation's presidential elections later this year, a constitutional court confirmed on Thursday, while former President Evo Morales remains out of the running.
Reuters
Bolivia's Senate President distances himself from Morales ahead of presidential elections The president of the Bolivian Senate and presidential candidate, Andronico Rodriguez (R), and Mariana Prado (L), candidate for the vice presidency, participate in an event in La Paz, Bolivia, 19 May 2025. Andronico Rodriguez broke with former president Evo Morales by launching his presidential candidacy on his own with the Alianza Popular party along with Mariana Prado as a candidate for vice president, amid a division in the ruling party. EPA-EFE/LUIS GANDARILLAS

Rodriguez, a leftist with roots in Bolivia's fractured ruling Movement for Socialism party, initially faced difficulties registering his own party for the race.

Morales, meanwhile, is constitutionally barred from running, though he has called for his supporters to take to the streets to demand his eligibility.

Rodriguez's "Third System" party can participate in August's elections, the court ruled on Thursday. A recent Ipsos CIESMORI poll showed him as the leading contender for the left, after opposition candidates Samuel Doria - a businessman and economist - and conservative ex-President Jorge Quiroga.

Morales, who has lost much of his political clout as he remains locked away in a compound guarded by his supporters in rural Bolivia to evade a warrant out for his arrest, on Thursday insisted that he will return to once again lead the country.

Morales, in a post on X, said that the court had acted like a "sniper" to defend "the empire's plan."

"It enables and restricts candidates' participation upon request," he added.

Courts have repeatedly ruled that Morales, who has already served three terms as president, is ineligible to run for another term.

"We again ask political actors to not try and judicialize the electoral process," senior Judge Rene Yvan Espada said in a press conference.

"We want to invite Bolivian citizens ... to follow through on their responsibility to carry out these elections with the utmost normality, harmony and peace possible," he added.

Morales has taken advantage of the waning popularity of Arce, once his mentee, due to rising living costs, political infighting and long lines for petrol supplies, all of which have fueled recent protests and street blockades.

(Reporting by Monica Machicao and Sergio Limachi; Writing by Kylie Madry; Editing by Natalia Siniawski and Sandra Maler)

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