Uruguay’s once-dull election has become a dead heat in the presidential runoff
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (AP) — Uruguayans on Sunday began voting for their next president in a tight runoff election between the candidates of the center-right incumbent party and a moderate left-wing coalition.
The close race between conservative Álvaro Delgado, most recently secretary of the current president, and the left-wing Yamandú Orsi, a working-class former history teacher, is taking place after a general election last month failed to produce a candidate with the required 50% of the vote.
The result will hinge on how many Uruguayans who voted for small government-aligned parties in the general election switch over to the opposition in the runoff.
Analysts say Delgado has a leg up on Orsi but many polls show a virtual tie between the two moderates whose campaigns on issues of social spending, sluggish economic growth and rising crime have largely steered clear of the electoral histrionics seen elsewhere in the world.