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As Guatemalans vote, what is undermining their faith in democracy?

Thirty parties have registered for the presidential vote in Guatemala this weekend, when citizens will also select members of Congress, mayors, and city councilors. But the commotion surrounding the election, with three top candidates disqualified from the race, has led many to lose faith in democracy. Confidence in the electoral system has fallen to a historic low of 20%, according to recent polls.

“I don’t see any point in voting in these elections,” says Paulo Estrada, whose father and uncle were among 183 victims of a dictatorship-era military operation on which Guatemalan judges are still working to hold aggressors accountable.

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How important is an independent judiciary to democracy? As Guatemala votes, many judges are threatened or in exile, and faith in the system is at record lows.

The Electoral Court “took out anyone who doesn’t agree with impunity, corruption, organized crime, and drug trafficking,” he says, referring to the exclusion of leading candidates, including his favorite, Thelma Cabrera, an Indigenous human rights defender.

The tumultuous run-up to the presidential elections underscores how far Guatemala has fallen in recent years – from having one of Latin America’s most admired anti-corruption judicial systems to the situation today, when judges and journalists are openly threatened.

“We’ve seen this in El Salvador and Nicaragua, too,” says Miguel Ángel Gálvez, a former judge who has been exiled since November. “The first step for these authoritarian leaders is to take over the judiciary.”

With Guatemalans heading to the polls Sunday for elections that range from the municipal to the presidential, confidence in the nation’s electoral system is hitting the lowest point since the 1985 transition to democracy.

Even as a record number of political parties have registered for the election, the Electoral Court has disqualified several top candidates over what are widely seen as political charges.

Contributing to the preelection turmoil, Guatemala’s independent judiciary has been destabilized, with its members more and more often in jail, under death threats, or in exile.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

How important is an independent judiciary to democracy? As Guatemala votes, many judges are threatened or in exile, and faith in the system is at record lows.

More than 25 judges and prosecutors have fled Guatemala in the face of pressure to drop large-scale corruption investigations or following threats and intimidation. Attorney General Consuelo Porras has suspended the immunity of some judges working on high-stakes cases, rendering them vulnerable to retribution.

The tumultuous run-up to the presidential elections underscores how far Guatemala has fallen in recent years – from having one of Latin America’s most admired anti-corruption judicial systems to the situation today, when judges and journalists are openly threatened.

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