News

Bolivians voted in general elections. Residents of a remote island disputed by Colombia hope their Peruvian government won't forget them. Fans of Universidad de Chile and Argentina's Independiente ...
Socialism may have failed, as it always does, in Bolivia, but that unfortunately does not mean that it is turning toward the free market.
The socialist project "imploded by itself," Bolivian policy analyst Rolando Schrupp tells Reason, citing public exhaustion ...
That marks the end of nearly 20 years of MAS rule, and assures a rightward tilt for the country’s politics in October. ■ Sign ...
The defeat of Bolivia's long powerful socialists at the weekend highlights a broader backlash against incumbent leftists that could be reflected in upcoming elections elsewhere in the region.

Turning Point

Bolivia’s presidential election has set the stage for a political transformation, unprecedented in nearly two decades.
The Bolivian Bishops’ Conference expressed hope after Bolivia’s recent general election, which marked a change in the country ...
Now, on October 19, Bolivians will hold presidential runoff for the first time—an option only introduced in the 2009 ...
Voters say they’ve had enough of the hard-left MAS party.
Bolivians have headed to the polls for a pivotal election that could end the long reign of the leftist Movement Toward ...
A seismic political shift has taken place in Bolivia. The country’s leftist Movimiento al Socialismo (Mas) party, which has dominated Bolivian politics for nearly 20 years, was voted out of power in a ...
One candidate is Rodrigo Paz, a conservative centrist senator and son of a neoliberal ex-president who is pitching himself as ...