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El Salvador's leader is autocrat to some, godsend to others
El Salvador's leader is autocrat to some, godsend to others

Boston Globe

time04-08-2025

  • Politics
  • Boston Globe

El Salvador's leader is autocrat to some, godsend to others

Homicides have dropped from several thousand a year to just over 100, according to the government — a rate lower than Canada's. So when lawmakers in Bukele's party abolished presidential term limits late last week, Salvadorans were far from uniformly opposed. Bukele's success in restoring safety has made him enormously popular, even as his tactics have raised alarms among human rights groups. But the question he seems to face, experts say, is how long that support can last as problems mount beyond the gangs. 'Maybe I'll feel differently if you ask me in 10 years; I don't know,' said Cecilia Lemus, who runs a nail salon in San Salvador. 'But for today, I have no problem with him being reelected.' Advertisement She added: 'I don't know if this is going to be like Venezuela; I don't think we're headed toward being Cuba, though I don't know.' Bukele may have chosen to solidify his power now for several reasons, experts said. His approval ratings are still soaring; his slow economy is humming along, albeit by borrowing heavily from the nation's pension fund. And President Trump is in office — happy to praise Bukele after sending him deportees and to dismiss human rights concerns. Advertisement A leader who solves a major crisis can 'become wildly popular, and the population will give you a blank check, for a time,' said Steven Levitsky, a Harvard political scientist who studies Latin America and is a coauthor of 'How Democracies Die.' 'Bukele is a smart guy, and he knows that a blank check isn't forever. He's had an incredible run; he has so much support, but no leader's popularity in the history of world has lasted forever,' he added. The electoral overhaul 'will protect him for the day that the electorate moves against him.' Bukele has sharply criticized Nicaragua and Venezuela for similar moves, but Sunday, he defended El Salvador's constitutional overhaul. Most 'developed countries allow the indefinite reelection of their head of government, and no one bats an eye,' he said on social media, drawing a comparison to European parliamentary systems, where lawmakers have the power to remove leaders. 'But when a small, poor country like El Salvador tries to do the same, suddenly it's the end of democracy.' Bukele's security strategy has won him admirers in the region — and a degree of imitation by other leaders battling drug gangs, like those in Costa Rica and Ecuador. But El Salvador's neighbors largely remained silent after his latest move. And some Salvadorans are starting to ask for more from Bukele, including economic growth, basic social programs, and help dealing with rising costs. Bukele has struggled to make changes economically, in particular, experts say, and has not released a comprehensive plan to do so beyond efforts to attract more tourists. Since he came to power in 2019, El Salvador's growth has lagged behind its neighbors, Guatemala and Nicaragua. Advertisement Last year, growth slipped to 2.6 percent from 3.5 percent in 2023, and it is expected to stall again this year, at 2.2 percent, according to the World Bank. About a third of the country lives in poverty. Bukele may have solidified his power before things could slip further, Levitsky and other analysts said. Another factor may be the occupant of the White House. During the Biden administration, the State Department denounced 'significant human rights issues' in El Salvador, spotlighting abuses in prisons after Bukele's mass arrests, which have left more than 80,000 people behind bars. But Trump has made clear he is not interested in policing human rights abroad, cutting State Department entities that work on those issues. This spring, Trump sent deportees accused of being gang members to Bukele's prison system. Along with abolishing term limits, the constitutional changes eliminate runoff elections, extend presidential terms to six years from five, and move up the presidential election by two years, to coincide with legislative elections in 2027. If Bukele is reelected that year and completes his term, he will have served for at least 14 years. A spate of protests this year may have been another driver in cementing Bukele's power sooner rather than later. His government has 'lost control of the narrative' in recent months, said Noah Bullock, executive director of Cristosal, a Salvadoran human rights group whose employees recently fled the country. First, the government ended a ban on metal mining. The decision, made despite strong public opposition, led to a rare reproach from Catholic bishops, who gathered 250,000 signatures asking for the ban's reinstatement. Advertisement The bishops were ignored, creating what Bullock called 'the sense that this government does what it wants, and it imposes its model of development on the population without listening.' Then a Salvadoran investigative outlet, El Faro, posted video interviews with gang leaders talking about a secret pact with Bukele's government to lower the murder rate. Bukele has long denied any such pact, but the interviews were broadly shared in El Salvador. The government issued arrest warrants for El Faro journalists, who fled the country. For the families of young men swept up in the mass arrests, the move to end term limits was particularly worrying. 'It means that now he'll never give up the presidency,' Reyna Isabel Cornejo said of Bukele. Her son was arrested at church a year ago for unknown reasons, she said, and she has not heard from him since. Two of her nephews have been imprisoned, too. She acknowledged that under Bukele, more people visit her pupusa restaurant and that it's safe to send orders out for delivery. But safety has come at a steep cost, she said. 'He's done a good job,' Cornejo said. 'But at the same time, behind the good things he's doing, there's a lot of evil.' This article originally appeared in

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