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Guatemala election turmoil: Tribunal certifies result minutes after progressive party suspended

Four people sit behind a long table.
Supreme Electoral Tribunal magistrates hold a news conference in Guatemala City on Wednesday.
(Wilder Lopez / Associated Press)
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Guatemala’s troubled presidential election was thrown into even greater turmoil Wednesday when the country’s top electoral tribunal confirmed the results of the June 25 vote while the attorney general’s office announced that the second-place party had been suspended.

The seemingly contradictory moves fed more than two weeks of rising tensions and suspicions after the first round of voting, which had seemingly sent conservative Sandra Torres and progressive Bernardo Arévalo into a Aug. 20 presidential runoff.

There were immediate calls Wednesday for Guatemalans to take to the streets in protest, and demonstrators gathered outside the Supreme Electoral Tribunal until heavy rain drove them away.

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It was not immediately clear how the situation would play out now that yet another court had intervened in Guatemala’s electoral process, but electoral authorities said Torres and Arévalo would face each other on Aug. 20.

But Rafael Curruchiche, the special prosecutor against impunity, said in a video statement that in May 2022 a citizen reported having his signature falsely added to the signature gathering effort of Arévalo’s Seed Movement party and that the attorney general office’s investigation also found 12 deceased people were included on its list of signatures.

The special prosecutor said there were indications that more than 5,000 signatures were illegally gathered for the party.

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Fearing democracy is at risk, Guatemalans are posting certified election forms on social media to show there wasn’t fraud in the presidential vote.

Curruchiche’s statement was released while the country waited for a scheduled news conference by the Supreme Electoral Tribunal in which it was expected to certify the result of the June 25 election. The tribunal confirmed the result minutes after the prosecutor announced that the Seed Movement’s legal status had been suspended.

Guatemala’s electoral law prohibits the suspension of political parties between when an election is called and when it is held. With a second round of voting required because no candidate exceeded 50% of the vote, it appeared that the Seed Movement could not be suspended.

After the first round, losing parties had challenged the result and courts intervened to block certification of the result. Concerns grew that efforts were afoot to keep Arévalo out of contention.

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This week, it appeared the demands imposed by the courts had finally been satisfied and electoral authorities said they were working toward certification of the result. But talk began to circulate on social platforms that another hurdle could be coming from the attorney general’s office.

The relatively new Seed Movement party had needed at least 25,000 signatures to form legally. Curruchiche suggested that not knowing where the party got the funds to pay signature gatherers left open the possibility of money laundering.

The details of the case were made known to the Supreme Electoral Tribunal in May, Curruchiche said.

The Guatemalan government said Monday that it is expelling a United Nations-backed anti-corruption commission that has investigated the president and other lawmakers — a decision that edges the Central American nation toward a constitutional crisis.

In 2021, the U.S. government said it had lost confidence in Guatemala’s commitment to battling corruption after Atty. Gen. Consuelo Porras fired Curruchiche’s predecessor. Last year, the U.S. State Department added Curruchiche to its list of corrupt and undemocratic actors, alleging that he obstructed corruption investigations.

Roberto Arzu, a conservative presidential hopeful who was barred from competing for allegedly starting his campaign prematurely, called on Guatemalans to take to the streets in protest after Curruchiche’s announcement.

“This is a corrupt system’s coup,” said Arzu, son of former President Álvaro Arzú.

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