Populist presidents are often giants with feet of clay. At the same
time that they seem to have a firm grip of power, their personalist
style of rule means that without their leadership, their movements and
political projects can disintegrate. After winning the 2013 election
with over 50 percent of the vote, President Rafael Correa’s party, Alianza País,
controlled the assembly (as congress is called in Ecuador), the courts
of justice, and all institutions of accountability. Following the
example of Venezuela’s Hugo Chávez, Correa reformed the constitution in
2015 to allow for his permanent reelection. Yet the timing did not work
out so well for him. The price of oil, Ecuador’s largest source of
foreign exchange, went down. Indigenous groups, environmentalists,
workers, and sectors of the middle class took to the streets to protest
his plans to stay in power indefinitely. Opinion polls showed that
Correa would have a difficult time winning the 2017 election, and he
decided not to run.
Lenín’s Perestroika
When Lenín Moreno and Jorge Glas, Correa’s hand-picked successors
won the 2017 election, Ecuador was polarized in two camps. Moreno, who
served as Correa’s vice president from 2007 to 2013, received 51 percent
of the vote in the second round of the vote. His rival, Guillermo
Lasso, a Catholic banker, was supported by the right, the business
community, and some leftist parties and social movements who sought to
put an end to autocracy. Lasso did not accept the results and, without
proof, claimed fraud. President Correa and his followers were determined
to stop at all costs what they viewed as the ascension of the right in
Latin America. Correa’s detractors were convinced that Lenín Moreno
would follow the autocratic policies of his predecessor and cover up
corruption.
The opposition and Alianza País coincided in believing that Moreno
would be Correa’s loyal puppet. Things turn out quite differently—and
unexpectedly. President Moreno broke with his mentor, took over Alianza
País, and started dismantling Correa’s autocratic grip on all
institutions of accountability. Most notably, he won a February 2018
referendum to prevent Correa from running for reelection and to forbid
politicians charged with corruption from holding posts in the
government.
Correa now is the leader of the opposition and claims that
Moreno betrayed him and his citizen’s revolution. Correa will not be
able to be a candidate in 2021; and if he is implicated in acts of
corruption, his entire political future will be uncertain.
The opposition and Alianza País coincided in believing that Moreno would be Correa’s loyal puppet. Things turn out quite differently—and unexpectedly.
Unlike Chile, Argentina, Brazil, and Paraguay—countries in which the right displaced the left in elections—in Ecuador Alianza País,
the largest leftist party, remains in power. Moreno empowered the
institutions of accountability and justice to lead a campaign against
corruption. The comptroller and the office of the attorney general
investigated cases of corruption. Jorge Glas, who served as vice
president under Correa from 2013 to 2017 and briefly under Moreno, as
well as former members of Correa’s cabinet, are serving terms in jail.
It is quite likely that Correa will be investigated and, perhaps,
charged with corruption.
Alianza País was more a political machine activated to win
elections than it was a typical political party, and its different
tendencies had in common only their loyalty to Correa. Without Correa’s
leadership, the party exploded into two factions. After breaking with
Correa, Moreno won the support of most elected officials and now
controls the party. Correa and a handful of his loyal followers
abandoned Alianza País and pledged to form a new political
movement. Yet Correa still commands the support of 30 to 40 percent of
Ecuadorians, according to the results of the February 2017 elections.
Correa’s legitimacy was grounded in the winning of elections to
displace traditional parties; the redistribution of oil rents; the
articulation of technocratic arguments that he was leading Ecuador to
hyper-modernity; and a populist discourse that transformed political
rivals into enemies. Correa won 11 plebiscitarian elections between 2006
and 2013. He combined populist and technocratic appeals.
He employed
Manichean rhetoric to convert rivals into enemies, surrounding himself
with experts and claiming to lead the technical and rational
transformation of Ecuador’s development model towards the production of
nanotechnology and biotechnology. When Moreno demonstrated that
corruption and inefficiency were widespread in Correa’s administration,
he called into question Correa’s self-promotion as the expert leading
the modernization of Ecuador. Moreno also broke with Correa’s populist
rhetoric that polarized society into friend and enemy. Instead, Moreno
has relied on dialogue with different sectors of society and on the
politics of compromise. He is not using the state media for his own
self-promotion, nor is he attacking journalists and activists in civil
society. His victory in the February 2018 referendum allows him to get
rid of Correa’s cronies at the highest levels in the court system and in
all the institutions of accountability. It is an open question whether
Moreno will allow for the reconstruction of the public sphere, social
movements, civil society, and democracy after ten years of autocratic
rule.
Correa’s Legacy
Correa won the 2006 election when all institutions of democracy were
in crisis. He came to power after widespread movements of resistance to
neoliberalism. Three presidents were removed by congress and were unable
to finish their terms. He proclaimed himself as the leader of a
citizen’s revolution and promised to call for a new constituent assembly
to overhaul all institutions. Correa abandoned neoliberal policies,
strengthened the state, and put it at the center of development. When
the prices of oil were high, he redistributed oil rents and reduced the
levels of poverty. Correa was also elected by promising to restore
Ecuador’s national sovereignty. Ecuador had surrendered its currency,
the sucre, for the U.S. dollar and had allowed the United
States to establish a military base in Manta. Correa overhauled
Ecuador’s foreign policies, joining ALBA, CELAC, and UNASUR.
Correa promised a better democracy based on social justice, while
disregarding the institutions that protect pluralism. His project from
the outset was autocratic. He followed a populist playbook
of concentrating power in the presidency, controlling all institutions
of accountability and the courts, using constitution-making
instrumentally to centralize power, waging war with the media,
attempting to control NGOs and civil society, creating social movements
from the top-down, and criminalizing protest.
Lenin Moreno and the Future of Democracy
President Moreno is strong and, paradoxically, simultaneously weak.
He is ruling with a constitution and institutions that have concentrated
power in the presidency. He is weak because he had to impose his
authority on Correa’s personalist party. Many former members of Correa’s
cabinet shifted loyalties. Some joined Moreno’s camp because Correa had
humiliated them, while others aimed to preserve their party and project
beyond Correa’s leadership. Most local caciques and power
brokers who control voters through the clientelistic exchange of votes
for resources shifted their loyalty to Moreno. After all, he is in
control of state resources, and Correa no longer has access to the pork
barrel. Correa relies now solely on his charisma, making it hard to
imagine that he will be able to maintain his current level of support of
about 30 to 40 percent.
Moreno is trying to transform Alianza País into a non-caudillista
political party. His project is to make AP into a party of the
democratic left. His assets include the fact that he is in control of
the state, AP is the largest political organization, and he can exchange
access to services, jobs, and other resources for political loyalty.
President Moreno is strong and, paradoxically, simultaneously weak.
The right does not trust Moreno. They want him to follow Guillermo Lasso’s neoliberal policies,
forgetting
that Moreno won on a leftist ticket. The right supported Moreno in the
February 4, 2018, referendum, but abandoned him the day after the
election. The right wants a total overhaul of Correa’s economic and
foreign policies. Moreno promised that he would not adopt neoliberal
adjustment policies or slash social spending. But he does aim to
establish trade deals with the United States and the countries of the
Trans-Pacific Partnership. The right also dreams of a reversal of
Correa’s foreign policy and hopes that Moreno will rid the government of
all of Correa’s former collaborators. Moreno aims to keep a leftist
identity while engaging in dialogue with the right and potentially
offering them some concessions. For its part, the right could use the
opening of the political system and the end of confrontation to build
strong political parties. One hopes that the right understands this
political moment as one of transition to democracy, in which all sectors
of society need to compromise in order to rid the country of Correa’s
authoritarianism.
Looking toward the future, the left could use the opening of the
political system to push for many repressed demands. Social movements
need to regroup and become stronger after ten years of cooptation and
repression. Moreno’s democratic opening and the end of fear of
repression are likely to encourage people to march in the streets and
protest. Indigenous and environmental groups might protest against
mining projects, public sector workers might demand a reinstatement of
their right to strike, and so forth.
Correa’s future is uncertain. He is temporarily banned from a future
attempt at reelection; but laws in Ecuador are made in the interest of
those in power. It is thus possible that Correa could resurrect his
political career and try to become yet again his nation’s redeemer.
*Carlos de la Torre is Professor of Sociology at the University of Kentucky and a former Wilson Center Fellow.
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