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Ken Burch

(50,254 posts)
Mon Dec 1, 2014, 02:27 AM Dec 2014

Tabare Vazquez wins Uruguay's run-off election

Source: BBC News

Uruguay's leftist candidate Tabare Vazquez has easily beaten his rival Luis Lacalle Pou in a presidential run-off, partial results suggest.

With more than 50% of the vote counted, Mr Vazquez, from the ruling Broad Party, has won about 53%. Mr Lacalle Pou, a member of the right-wing National Party, received 41%.

Mr Lacalle Pou later admitted defeat.

Read more: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-30268862

6 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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madokie

(51,076 posts)
3. Here is the wiki page on the President of the last 4 years, what a man he is too
Mon Dec 1, 2014, 08:43 AM
Dec 2014
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jos%C3%A9_Mujica

(Big snip)

Personal life
Mujica and his wife

In 2005, Mujica married Lucía Topolansky, a fellow Tupamaro member and current senator, after many years of co-habitation. They have no children and live on an austere farm in the outskirts of Montevideo where they cultivate chrysanthemums for sale, having declined to live in the opulent presidential palace or use its staff.[36] His humble lifestyle is reflected by his choice of an aging Volkswagen Beetle as transport.[37] In 2010, the value of the car was $1,800 and represented the entirety of the mandatory annual personal wealth declaration filed by Mujica for that year. In November 2014, the Uruguayan newspaper Búsqueda reported that he had been offered 1 million dollars for the car, which was manufactured in 1987; he said that if he did get 1 million dollars for the car it would be donated to house the homeless through a programme that he supports.[38] His wife owns the farm they live on. Some Uruguayans see him as "a roly-poly former guerrilla who grows flowers on a small farm and swears by vegetarianism".[3][39][40][41][42][43] He describes himself as atheist.[1] Also living at the farm is his three-legged dog, Manuela.[44]

I would love to have a man of his stature to be my President. madokie

Judi Lynn

(160,516 posts)
4. Oncologist Tabare Vazquez is Uruguay's new president
Mon Dec 1, 2014, 03:40 PM
Dec 2014

Oncologist Tabare Vazquez is Uruguay's new president

(AGI) Montevideo, Dec 1 - Tabare Vazquez, a 74-year-old oncologist, won Uraguay's presidential election on Sunday with 53.6 percent of votes. He succeeds Jose Mujica, who shocked the world with his liberal reforms and penny-pinching. Vazquez, who was president from 2005 to 2010, topped centre-right rival Luis Lacalle Pou of the National Party 53% to 40%. Mr Pou, 41, a conservative, is the son of a former president. Mr Vazquez will lead the third consecutive liberal government, and faces the economic challenges of a country with three million inhabitants. He will also proceed with a plan to put the government in charge of regulating the production, distribution and sale of marijuana on a nationwide scale, about which he had expressed doubts. This amounts to something of a paradox for a doctor who did not give up his profession during his first mandate, when he passed extremely tough anti-smoking measures.

In 2006, Vazquez turned a country of 3.3 million inhabitants into the first South American country to prohibit smoking in public places. In 2010, tobacco company Philip Morris International filed a complaint against Uruguay, claiming that the country had violated a bilateral investment treaty with Switzerland, where the company is based, and that up to 80 percent of cigarette packs was taken up with anti-smoking warnings. The authorities in Uruguay, where smoking is only allowed in the street, have stressed that the sale of cannabis does not amount to liberalisation, but is a state-regulated market. (AGI) . .

http://www.agi.it/en/world/news/oncologist_tabare_vazquez_is_uruguay_s_new_president-201412011804-pol-inw0007

(Short article, no more at link.)

Judi Lynn

(160,516 posts)
5. Uruguay's Vazquez wins presidential vote, extends leftist rule
Tue Dec 2, 2014, 04:03 PM
Dec 2014

Uruguay's Vazquez wins presidential vote, extends leftist rule
Reuters
By By Malena Castaldi and Esteban Farat | Reuters – Mon 1 Dec, 2014..

By Malena Castaldi and Esteban Farat

MONTEVIDEO (Reuters) - Tabare Vazquez won back his old job as president of Uruguay in a runoff election on Sunday, extending the decade-long rule of a leftist coalition and allowing it to roll out a groundbreaking law that legalizes the production and sale of marijuana.

Vazquez won comfortably with 52.8 percent support while his center-right challenger, Luis Lacalle Pou, trailed on 40.5 percent, official results showed late on Sunday night.

Lacalle Pou earlier conceded defeat after quick counts showed an easy victory for Vazquez, and thousands of ruling Broad Front supporters streamed through the rain-soaked streets of Montevideo, waving party banners in celebration.

Vazquez, 74, is a respected oncologist who helped heal rifts inside the Broad Front in the late 1990s and led it to power in 2005, ending two decades of conservative rule that followed a military dictatorship.

More:
https://in.news.yahoo.com/uruguayan-ruling-partys-vazquez-wins-presidential-election-021913188--business.html

Judi Lynn

(160,516 posts)
6. 'Safeguarding Historic Marijuana Legalization,' Uruguay's Vazquez Wins Election
Tue Dec 2, 2014, 05:55 PM
Dec 2014

Published on Monday, December 01, 2014

by Common Dreams

'Safeguarding Historic Marijuana Legalization,' Uruguay's Vazquez Wins Election

'Uruguayans have said yes … yes to more democracy,' the former president declared

by Andrea Germanos, staff writer



Uruguay's ex-president Tabare Vazquez was declared on Sunday the winner of the country's presidential election, an outcome that is expected to keep in place implementation of historic marijuana reform.

Vazquez's win marks a continuation of power for the leftist Broad Front coalition.

Reuters reported: "Center-right opposition candidate Luis Lacalle Pou quickly conceded defeat after three unofficial quick counts showed Vazquez with over 53 percent support. Lacalle Pou trailed with about 41 percent of the vote."

At a victory rally, Vazquez said: "Uruguayans have said yes … yes to more democracy … yes to better public services."

More:
http://www.commondreams.org/news/2014/12/01/safeguarding-historic-marijuana-legalization-uruguays-vazquez-wins-election

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