You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Spanish. (October 2019) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
This article needs additional citations for verification. (October 2019) |
Civic Community Comunidad Ciudadana | |
---|---|
Leader | Carlos Mesa |
Senate spokesperson | Andrea Barrientos |
Chamber spokesperson | Carlos Alarcón |
Founded | 13 November 2018 |
Membership (2019) | 88,122[1] |
Ideology | Liberalism Constitutionalism Third Way Social democracy |
Political position | Centre[2][3] to centre-left[4] |
Colours | Dark Orange Orange Green |
Members | List
|
Senate | 11 / 36 |
Chamber of Deputies | 39 / 130 |
Governorships | 0 / 9 |
Mayors | 6 / 337 |
Website | |
https://comunidadciudadanabo.com/ | |
Civic Community[5][6] (Spanish: Comunidad Ciudadana, CC) is a liberal Bolivian political coalition led by former president Carlos Mesa, founded in 2018 to contest the 2019 general election. It was born of the alliance of Revolutionary Left Front (FRI), Sovereignty and Freedom (Sol.Bo), All Organization, and Kochala Force parties.[7][8] The alliance holds Mesa's presidential candidacy, with former minister Gustavo Pedraza as his running mate. The CC elected 50 deputies and 14 senators in the country's Plurinational Legislative Assembly in the election.
The CC campaign focused on condemning the candidacy of incumbent president Evo Morales to a controversial but legal fourth consecutive five-year term. The election took place on October 20, 2019. With a preliminary vote count of 45% for incumbent president Evo Morales and 38% for his leading challenger, former president Carlos Mesa, after 83% of votes were counted, neither of those conditions appeared likely to be met. A second-round runoff vote between those two candidates would therefore be held on 15 December.[9]
After that figure of 83% of the total, however, no further updates to the preliminary results were made after 19:40 hours local time, which caused consternation among opposition politicians and the election monitors deployed by the Organization of American States; candidate Mesa described the suspension as "extremely serious" and spoke of manipulation, while the OAS said an explanation was essential. The electoral authorities explained that updates to the preliminary count had been halted because the official results were beginning to be released; nevertheless, no official results were published overnight.[10]