Polls open in stable Uruguay in a vote free of political hostility seen elsewhere in the region
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (AP) — Polls opened in the small South American nation of Uruguay on Sunday in an election race between centrists that defies regional trends of bitter division and democratic erosion.
Some 2.7 million registered voters in Uruguay are set to pick a new president, fill Parliament and decide whether to overhaul the social security system in a contentious constitutional referendum that would expand the fiscal deficit in one of Latin America’s wealthiest countries.
The two presidential front-runners represent a choice between extending the mandate of the current governing center-right coalition or bringing back the moderate left-wing alliance that transformed the country into one of the most socially liberal when it last governed from 2005 to 2020.
In stark contrast to other Latin American countries, as well as to the United States, both presidential candidates agree on major issues and have waged remarkably civil campaigns free of personal insults.