Same-sex marriage supporter easily wins Costa Rica elections
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica — Voters gave a resounding no to an evangelical pastor who rose to political prominence by campaigning against same-sex marriage, allowing Costa Rica’s governing party to win an easy presidential victory.
While polls had indicated Sunday’s runoff would be tight, it was not even close. Carlos Alvarado, a novelist and former Cabinet minister running for the ruling Citizen Action Party, won by a wide margin.
The Supreme Electoral Council said that with 95 per cent of ballots counted late Sunday, Carlos Alvarado had 60.8 per cent of the votes, and evangelical Fabricio Alvarado of the National Restoration party had 39.2 per cent. The two men are not related.
Fabricio Alvarado had been viewed as political also-ran when he entered the presidential contest, though he enjoyed high name recognition for his evangelism and for working on one of Costa Rica’s main TV newscasts. But he spoke out strongly against a call by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights for Costa Rica to allow same-sex marriage and he finished first in the election’s first round in February.