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1979 Bolivian general election

← 1978 1 July 1979 1980 →
Presidential election
Registered1,871,070
Turnout90.22%
 
Candidate Hernán Siles Zuazo Víctor Paz Estenssoro Hugo Banzer
Party MNRI MNR ADN
Alliance UDP MNR-A
Running mate Jaime Paz Zamora Luis Ossio Mario Rolón Anaya [es]
Popular vote 528,696 527,184 218,587
Percentage 35.98% 35.88% 14.88%

President before election

David Padilla
FFAA

Elected president

Election results annulled
Wálter Guevara (PRA) elected acting president

Legislative election

All 27 seats in the National Senate
All 117 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
Party Seats +/–
National Senate
Revolutionary Nationalist Movement

16 +12
Democratic and Popular Union

8 +4
Nationalist Democratic Action

3 New
Chamber of Deputies
Revolutionary Nationalist Movement

48 +40
Democratic and Popular Union

38 +22
Nationalist Democratic Action

19 New
Socialist Party – 1

5 +5
Popular Alliance for National Integration

5 New
Túpac Katari Indian Movement

1 +1
Bolivian Union Party

1 New
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.

The 1979 Bolivian general election was held on Sunday, 1 July 1979. Voters went to the polls to elect the president and vice president and all seats in the bicameral 144-member National Congress, for a four-year term. No candidate having won a majority in the first round, the election went to parliament, which selected between the top three most-voted contenders. After multiple failed ballots, an agreement was reached to elect Wálter Guevara as acting president pending new elections.

The democratic transition in Bolivia began in 1978, after Hugo Banzer scheduled the first general election in twelve years for 9 July. The government's candidate, Juan Pereda, won the vote, but evident electoral fraud led election authorities to annul the results. Pereda seized power in a coup d'état on 21 July and scheduled new elections for 1980. He was, in turn, ousted in another coup d'état on 24 November that installed David Padilla, who brought forward the election to 1979.

Former presidents Hernán Siles Zuazo of the Democratic and Popular Unity coalition and Víctor Paz Estenssoro of the Revolutionary Nationalist Movement – Alliance were once again central candidates in this election, with the added component of Hugo Banzer's newly-formed Nationalist Democratic Action. An additional five minor fronts filed to appear on the ballot. Despite some anomalies, the election was relatively clean compared to historical processes.

In the end, the vote totals of the two main candidates were separated by 1,512 votes (0.10%), the narrowest national popular vote margin in recent history. Siles won the plurality of the popular vote, while Paz's alliance won a comfortable congressional majority. Congress convened on 1 August but could not coalesce around a single candidate, leading to the annulment of the results and the election of Wálter Guevara as acting president until another election could be held in 1980.

Background

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1978 general election

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Bolivia marked the start of its democratic transition in 1978 with the announcement that Hugo Banzer intended to bring a close to his six-year military regime and make way for civil administration, ending an almost uninterrupted period of successive military governments that began in 1964. A general election was scheduled for 9 July 1978, the first election held since 1966.

Two former presidents, Hernán Siles Zuazo and Víctor Paz Estenssoro – representing the left- and right-wing flanks of the historic Revolutionary Nationalist Movement (MNR) – returned from exile to participate in the election. They faced the government-backed candidacy of Juan Pereda of the Nationalist Union of the People (UNP), who touted a continuation of Banzer's political vision.

Pereda won the election against a backdrop of clear electoral manipulation – including more tallied votes than existed registered voters. The results sparked national uproar. Under pressure, the government was forced to acknowledge the evident vote tampering and Pereda himself requested that the National Electoral Court annul the results, which it subsequently did.[1]

Revolving door of governments

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Following the annulment of the 1978 results, the Electoral Court issued a statement urging new elections be held within the next six months. Banzer, for his part, reaffirmed his commitment to step down by 6 August, leaving the issue of organizing a snap vote to a future government led by the Armed Forces. By that point, backers of the UNP had begun several armed revolts across the country, and in Santa Cruz, Pereda was proclaimed president.[2] Faced with the uprising, Banzer resigned on 21 July and ceded power to a military triumvirate headed by three senior commanders: Víctor González Fuentes, Alfonso Villalpando, and Gutenberg Barroso. The junta then turned over power to Pereda, who was sworn in as president shortly thereafter.[3]

Shortly after taking office, Pereda announced his regime's intent to reinitiate the stalled process of democratization.[4] In declarations to the New York Times, the president signaled that a new general election would be held in early 1980 "if" pending reforms to the country's election law and a renewed voter registry could be completed in time. Pereda expressly rejected scheduling the election for 1979, as it would coincide with the centennial of the War of the Pacific and complicate diplomatic efforts to secure an ocean corridor for Bolivia from Chile.[5] The parties of the opposition squarely rejected that timeline:[6] the MNR of Víctor Paz set 27 May 1979 as a target date for elections,[7] while Siles's front declared that it would employ nonviolent resistance in demand of new elections within six months.[8]

Pereda outlined his election plan in a public address delivered on 6 August. The president dug in on 1980 as the likely election year, pledging that the process would last no longer than twelve months. In addition, Pereda declined to run as a candidate again, stating that the regime would be impartial towards all presidential contenders.[9]

Electoral system

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Candidates and campaigns

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Alliance Endorsement Leader
Hernán Siles Zuazo
Democratic and Popular Union
MNRI Left-wing Revolutionary Nationalist Movement Hernán Siles
PCB Communist Party of Bolivia Jorge Kolle
MIR Revolutionary Left Movement Jaime Paz
MIN National Left Movement Luis Sandoval
PSB-A Socialist Party of Bolivia – Atauichi Sabino T. Atauichi
MPLN Popular Movement for National Liberation Ramiro Velasco
ALIN Alliance of the National Left Rubén Sánchez
PRIN-M Revolutionary Party of the Nationalist Left – Möller Edwin Möller
MRE Revolutionary Spartacus Movement Dulfredo Rúa
POR-TP Revolutionary Workers' Party (Trotskyist–Posadist) Carlos Flores
ODEUR Organization of Revolutionary Unity Mario Lanza
Source:

Revolutionary Nationalist Movement

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Alliance Endorsement Leader
Víctor Paz Estenssoro
Revolutionary Nationalist Movement
MNR Revolutionary Nationalist Movement Víctor Paz
PRA Authentic Revolutionary Party Wálter Guevara
PDC Christian Democratic Party Luis Ossio
FRI Revolutionary Left Front Oscar Zamora
MRTK Túpac Katari Revolutionary Movement Macabeo Chila
Source:

Nationalist Democratic Action

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Alliance Endorsement Leader
Hugo Banzer
Nationalist Democratic Action
ADN Nationalist Democratic Action Hugo Banzer
FSB-M Bolivian Socialist Falange – Moreira Gastón Moreira
PRA-R Authentic Revolutionary Party – Ríos Jorge Ríos
ARB Barrientist Revolutionary Alliance Jorge Burgoa
MNR-J Revolutionary Nationalist Movement – Julio Rubén Julio
Source:

Minor parties and alliances

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Socialist Party – 1

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[edit]
Alliance Endorsement Leader
René Bernal
Popular Alliance for National Integration
MARC Revolutionary Agrarian Movement of the Bolivian Peasantry René Bernal
FSB Bolivian Socialist Falange Mario Gutiérrez
Source:

Other parties and alliances

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Results

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Presidential results

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Analysis

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https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1979/08/05/120999793.html?pageNumber=122

OEP claims VO won 100 more votes in Chuquisaca (see Presencia 31 jULY)

Candidate Running mate Party or alliance Votes %
Hernán Siles Zuazo Jaime Paz Zamora Democratic and Popular Union 528,696 35.98
Víctor Paz Estenssoro Luis Ossio Revolutionary Nationalist Movement 527,184 35.88
Hugo Banzer Mario Rolón Anaya [es] Nationalist Democratic Action 218,587 14.88
Marcelo Quiroga Santa Cruz Jaime Taborga Socialist Party – 1 70,765 4.82
René Bernal Mario Gutiérrez Popular Alliance for National Integration 60,262 4.10
Luciano Tapia Eufronio Vélez Túpac Katari Indian Movement 28,344 1.93
Wálter Gonzales Benjamín Saravia Bolivian Union Party 18,979 1.29
Ricardo Catoira Filemón Escobar [es] Workers' Vanguard 16,660 1.13
Total 1,469,477 100.00
Valid votes 1,469,477 86.78
Invalid/blank votes 223,856 13.22
Total votes 1,693,333 100.00
Registered voters/turnout 1,876,920 90.22
Source: Plurinational Electoral Organ | Electoral Atlas

By department

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The results by department contributed heavily to the gridlock that followed the election. (?) The UDP won in just two departments: La Paz and Cochabamba. Results-wise, the coalition owed its narrow popular vote plurality to its formidable performance in La Paz, whose population, compared to the other eight departments, made it fundamental to winning the election. In contrast, the second-place MNR-A swept the remaining seven departments, giving it a comfortable majority bench in parliament, even as it fell short of taking the most votes nationwide.[10]

Ballot Chuquisaca La Paz Cochabamba Oruro Potosí Tarija Santa Cruz Beni Pando
Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes %
UDP 34,575 38.56 260,971 54.76 67,634 29.20 36,214 31.31 68,898 33.48 9,726 14.70 43,679 18.33 6,103 15.85 896 12.31
MNR-A 34,609 38.60 78,023 16.37 64,640 27.91 46,232 39.97 105,782 51.41 43,601 65.92 134,300 56.35 15,885 41.27 4,112 46.50
ADN 10,032 11.09 77,614 16.29 42,983 18.56 10,633 9.19 16,090 7,82 9,774 14.78 36,696 15.40 13,044 33.88 1,721 23.65
PS-1 3,965 4.42 24,553 5.15 28,163 12.16 6,466 5.59 3,906 1.90 595 0.90 2,932 1.23 166 0.43 19 0.26
APIN 2,185 2.44 8,454 1.77 16,449 7.10 10,819 9.35 2,789 1.36 811 1.23 15,412 6.47 2,889 7.50 454 6.24
MITKA 1,343 1.50 16,557 3.47 3,744 1.62 2,707 2.34 2,677 1.30 277 0.42 957 0.40 65 0.17 17 0.23
PUB 1,868 2.08 4,572 0.96 5,161 2.23 1,253 1.08 3,135 1.52 790 1.19 1,958 0.82 208 0.54 34 0.47
VO 1,089 1.21 5,785 1.21 2,851 1.23 1,331 1.15 2,490 1.21 570 0.86 2,384 1.00 135 0.35 25 0.34
Total 89,666 100.00 476,529 100.00 231,625 100.00 115,655 100.00 205,767 100.00 66,144 100.00 238,318 100.00 38,495 100.00 7,278 100.00
Valid votes 89,666 89.09 476,529 79.05 231,625 85.72 115,655 94.49 205,767 90.44 66,144 94.19 238,318 94.56 38,495 96.38 7,278 96.16
Invalid/blank 10,982 10.91 126,257 20.95 38,582 14.29 6,750 5.51 21,751 9.56 4,079 5.81 13,717 5.44 1,447 3.62 291 3.84
Total votes 100,648 100.00 602,786 100.00 270,207 100.00 122,405 100.00 227,518 100.00 70,223 100.00 252,035 100.00 39,942 100.00 7,569 100.00
Source: Plurinational Electoral Organ | Electoral Atlas

Legislative results

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Party or alliance Chamber of Deputies National Senate
Seats +/– Of total (%) Seats +/– Of total (%)
Democratic and Popular Union MNRI 16 +16 13.67
7 +7 25.93
PCB 8 +8 6.84
1 +1 3.70
MIR 6 +6 5.13
0 0 0.00
MIN 2 +2 1.71
0 0 0.00
Others 6 +6 5.13
0 0 0.00
Total 38 +38 32.48
8 +8 29.63


1979 Bolivian parliamentary election
Party or alliance Chamber of Deputies National Senate
Seats +/– Of total (%) Seats +/– Of total (%)
Democratic and Popular Union 38 +22 32.48
8 +4 29.63
Revolutionary Nationalist Movement 48 +40 41.03
16 +12 59.26
Nationalist Democratic Action 19 New 16.24
3 New 11.11
Socialist Party – 1 5 +5 4.27
0 0 0.00
Popular Alliance for National Integration 5 New 4.27
0 New 0.00
Túpac Katari Indian Movement 1 +1 0.85
0 0 0.00
Bolivian Union Party 1 New 0.85
0 New 0.00
Workers' Vanguard 0 New 0.00
0 New 0.00
Total 117 0 27 0
Source: Plurinational Electoral Organ | Electoral Atlas

Congressional ballot

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Negotiations

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Congress convened on 1 August with the immediate task of electing the president and vice president from among the three-most voted tickets. Hernán Siles, Víctor Paz Estenssoro, and Hugo Banzer all entered into contention/ (PRE 1/8/79, p. 1) To secure victory, one candidate needed to receive an absolute majority of votes cast in the 144-member Congress, (PRE 1/8/79, p. 1, 17) equating to seventy-three total votes. (?) If no candidate won a majority on the first ballot, the least-voted candidate was to be eliminated and lawmakers would continue to vote from among the top two contenders until one candidate came out on top. (PRE 1/8/79, p. 1)

In past elections, this method of selection by congressional ballot had never posed an issue, as the legislature had always ratified the top-voted candidate. (Mesa 41)

The first vote for president was expected to take place on 2 August (PRE 1/8/79, p. 1) but quarrels over leadership in the Senate and especially Chamber of Deputies delayed the process. (?) ...

First ballot

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Proceedings began at 6:48 p.m. BOT on 4 August, when a joint session of Congress was installed under the supervision of Wálter Guevara (PRA),[11] the president of the Senate and ex officio president of the National Congress. (Presencia 3/8/79, p. 10) All 144 lawmakers were present.[12] The first motion by the UDP, that the gallery be opened to the public, was dismissed by Guevara because the press was already present. A subsequent suggestion by the PS-1 that the vote be taken by roll call received support from the UDP bench but was rejected by the MNR-A, which stated that the Constitution provided for a secret ballot.[13]

The first vote took place at about 10:03 p.m. The final tally gave Paz the lead, with a relative majority of sixty-eight votes, just five votes shy of the seventy-three needed to win outright. (RC19 NYT 5/8/79) All sixty-four members of the MNR-A bench voted for Paz, as did the three MARC lawmakers and the sole PUB congressman. (?) Siles and Banzer were backed only by their own members – the UDP ticket received forty-six votes and ADN obtained twenty-two votes. (RC 19) The five legislators of the PS-1 nullified their votes, (Presencia 5/8/79, p. 1) while one congressman from MITKA and two from the FSB cast blank votes. (?) Banzer was eliminated and Paz and Siles moved on to the next round. (RC 19)

Candidate Party or alliance Votes %
Víctor Paz Estenssoro Revolutionary Nationalist Movement 68 47.22
Hernán Siles Zuazo Democratic and Popular Unity 46 31.94
Hugo Banzer Nationalist Democratic Action 22 15.28
Invalid/blank votes 8 5.56
Total votes 144 100.00
Source: Romero de Campero 1996, p. 19

The "empantanamiento"

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Following the first vote, and amid a looming impasse, allegations of subterfuge and vote buying began to be thrown. When the session reconvened at 10:39 p.m., Deputy César Vela (MNRI) accused the MNR-A of attempting to bribe him. After the second ballot to decide between Paz and Siles moved forward at 11:17 p.m., (RC 19) the results indicated that one UDP lawmaker had indeed defected to the MNR-A.[14] When the votes were counted, Paz had bumped up to sixty-nine votes, while Siles dropped to forty-five. (RC19) The number of spoilt ballots remained at five but the quantity of blank votes rose to twenty-five, as the entire ADN bench remained committed to not support either candidate. (RC 19 Presencia 5/8/79, p. 1)

As the election carried into the early morning of 5 August, irregularities began to arise in the vote-counting process. The third ballot, which took place at 12:30 a.m., had to be thrown out because a total of 145 votes were cast, more than there were lawmakers. Amid growing doubt that either candidate could secure a majority, Senator José Luis Roca [es] (PDC) proposed that a commission be set up to negotiate with Siles but the idea was rejected by Guevara, who insisted on moving forward with a fourth vote. (RC 19) According to Alfonso Ferrufino (MIR), issues with party discipline in the two previous ballots had put the UDP on "red alert". As a result, Guido Capra (CERNA) and Leopoldo López (MIR) were put in charge of whipping the vote and "controlled" the way other UDP lawmakers voted as they deposited their slips in the ballot box.[14] Consequently, the fourth ballot held at 12:55 a.m. resulted in Paz and Siles's vote totals reverting back to how they were in the first round. (RC 20)

Two more ballots held in the afternoon failed to break the deadlock. The fifth ballot, like the third, was annulled due to the existence of 145 votes. By the time of the sixth and final ballot, support for Paz dropped, as one lawmaker opted to cast a blank vote. The number of protest ballots thus ticked up to thirty-one, while Siles remained steady at forty-six votes. (RC20) The standstill in Congress came to be widely dubbed "el empantanamiento".[α]

https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1979/08/05/120998798.html?pageNumber=7

Candidate Party or alliance Second ballot Fourth ballot Sixth ballot
Votes % Votes % Votes %
Víctor Paz Estenssoro Revolutionary Nationalist Movement 69 47.92 68 47.22 67 46.53
Hernán Siles Zuazo Democratic and Popular Unity 45 31.25 46 31.94 46 31.94
Invalid/blank votes 30 20.83 30 20.83 31 21.53
Total votes 144 100.00 144 100.00 144 100.00
Source: Romero de Campero 1996, pp. 19–20

Resolution

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Guevara solution

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https://elpais.com/diario/1979/08/05/internacional/302652017_850215.html


"there was no friendship in the relationship" https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1979/08/08/111187214.html?pageNumber=2


https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1979/08/04/112044679.html?pageNumber=4

FSB, PS-1, AND MITKA "abstuvieron" PRESENCIA 7 AUGUST

Candidate Party or alliance Votes %
Wálter Guevara Authentic Revolutionary Party 136 94.44
Invalid/blank votes 8 5.56
Total votes 144 100.00
Source:

Constitutional analysis

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The constitutionality of Guevara's accession to the presidency remains a subject of legal ambiguity. In its designation of Guevara, the legislature made an appeal to Article 93 of the Constitution,[15] which established the president of the Senate as second in the line of succession [es], after the vice president. The employment of this provision – intended to delineate succession in the event of a presidential vacancy – (?) disregarded the fact that the presidency was not vacant. In opposing the measure, David Áñez [pt] (FSB) asserted that Guevara's appointment was "unconstitutional and can be challenged before the Supreme Court of Justice".[16]

Parliamentary historian Valentín Abecia Baldivieso agrees that the solution did not comply with the constitutional dictum that one of the candidates with the most votes be elected president. Abecia employed the legal term "sui generis" to describe Guevara's election.[17] For historian Carlos Mesa, the emergence of a congressional impasse was a situation not contemplated by the Constitution "and therefore raise[s] doubts and questions that are not fully resolved by the jurisprudence applied in the past".[18] Says Mesa: "Strictly speaking, the Guevara solution ... [which] above all safeguarded the continuity of the democratic process, [is] not constitutionally acceptable".[19] Still, in his cumulative analysis of the legal status of each of Bolivia's governments, Mesa labels the Guevara administration constitutional.[20]

"Article XCIII". Constitution of Bolivia. 1967.

Aftermath

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Absent ... Guevara's feeble interim administration

Reporting in the aftermath of the election but before the congressional ballot, The New York Times commented that, between charges of electoral irregularities, a standoff in legislative negotiations, and the continued threat of military intervention, "the luster has already faded from Bolivia's shiny new democracy".[21]

References

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Notes

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  1. ^ lit.'the impasse' or 'the logjam'; from the Spanish empantar 'to get bogged down'.

Footnotes

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  1. ^ Mesa Gisbert 2016, pp. 190–192.
  2. ^ Presencia 30 June 1979, p. 8.
  3. ^ The New York Times 22 July 1978, p. 1.
  4. ^ Presencia 25 July 1978, p. 1.
  5. ^ The New York Times 27 July 1978, p. 8.
  6. ^ Presencia 29 July 1978, p. 8.
  7. ^ Presencia 31 July 1978, p. 3.
  8. ^ Presencia 30 July 1978, p. 9.
  9. ^ Presencia 7 August 1978, pp. 1, 9.
  10. ^ Mesa Gisbert 2016, p. 195.
  11. ^ Romero de Campero 1996, p. 18.
  12. ^ Presencia 5 August 1979, p. 1.
  13. ^ Romero de Campero 1996, p. 19.
  14. ^ a b Mesa Gisbert 2009, 8:20–9:15.
  15. ^ Presencia 7 August 1979, p. 1.
  16. ^ Presencia 7 August 1979, p. 8, "Áñez Pedraza sostuvo que la elección de Guevara 'es anticonstitucional y puede ser demandada ante la Corte Suprema de Justicia'".
  17. ^ Abecia Baldivieso 1997, p. 310.
  18. ^ Mesa Gisbert 2016, p. 276, "Está claro que situaciones como [esta] no están contempladas por la Constitución y, por tanto, ofrecen dudas e interrogantes no resueltas del todo en la jurisprudencia aplicada en el pasado".
  19. ^ Mesa Gisbert 2016, p. 276, "En puridad, la solución Guevara ... [que] sobre todo resguard[ó] la continuidad del proceso democrático, no [es] constitucionalmente aceptable".
  20. ^ Mesa Gisbert 2016, pp. 386–388.
  21. ^ The New York Times 1 August 1979, p. 16.

Works cited

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Print publications


Books and encyclopedias

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