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Luisa González says increasing social welfare spending is essential for national revival

Feb 6, 2025 | 0 comments

By Alexandra Valencia

Citizens Revolution presidential candidate Luisa González says her plans to increase spending on social welfare as well as imposing stiffer penalties on criminals will work better than what she calls the ad-hoc policies of President Daniel Noboa, but she faces an uphill battle to win Sunday’s presidential election according to most polls.

Luisa Gonzalez with former president Rafael Correa

González, who lost to Noboa in a 2023 snap election when he was voted in to serve the remainder of his predecessor’s term, is the candidate for the Citizens Revolution party led by her mentor, former President Rafael Correa.

Most polls point to an April run-off between 47-year-old lawyer González, who would be the first woman elected Ecuador’s president, and business heir Noboa, 37. Others have Noboa winning in the first round.

“The country cannot improvise,” González said during a radio interview in late January. “It requires knowledge, a team and experience, that’s clearly what we have in Citizens’ Revolution and with Luisa González.”

González says she would respond to Ecuador’s drug trade-fueled crime wave with major military and police operations and that she would pursue allegedly corrupt judges and prosecutors. She also wants to construct renewable energy projects and provide low-interest credit for small and women-run businesses, as well as increase social spending in violent areas.

First, however, she says social spending must be significantly increased.

González and 14 other candidates have excoriated Noboa over continued violence on the streets, but none have suggested a major security strategy that differs significantly from the tough-on-crime measures he is already enacting.

González first met Correa at a government event in Riobamba. She began working with his office in 2008, going on to lead two government secretariats, and was elected to the legislature in 2021.

Correa, who governed until 2017 and now lives in Belgium, was sentenced in 2020 to eight years in prison on corruption charges he says are political persecution.

Some legislature candidates for Citizens’ Revolution have said Correa will return to Ecuador if González wins and that former vice-president Jorge Glas, who is in prison on corruption convictions, will be free to take up a Mexican offer of asylum.

“Luisa is an intelligent woman and totally capable of getting us out of the mire we are trapped in,” said Mayito Villacis, 20, in the coastal city of Guayaquil. “We must recover our country and erase Noboa from our history.”

González, who describes herself as a single mother, animal lover and sportswoman, has said she, not Correa, will take decisions if she is elected president.

“I won’t stop until Ecuador has been revived,” González said in a campaign video. “Whenever they tell me something is impossible, that’s when I’m most convinced it’s possible.”
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Credit: Reuters

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