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Former Bolivian president Evo Morales has launched a campaign for a contender called “Nulo,” representing a null-and-void ...
Now, on October 19, Bolivians will hold presidential runoff for the first time—an option only introduced in the 2009 ...
Bolivia's presidential candidate Jorge "Tuto" Quiroga has promised major economic reforms, including giving citizens direct ownership stakes.
Morales was the first member of Bolivia’s indigenous population to become president and was in power for 13 years and nine months, the longest term in the country’s history.
Voters say they’ve had enough of the hard-left MAS party.
Evo Morales was cheered as he made his way back to Bolivia a year after he was forced to step down from office and abandoned the country, spending his exile in Mexico and later Argentina.
Bolivia’s former President, Evo Morales, said that he is willing to return to the country and not run in the next election for the sake of peace and stability if his resignation is accepted.