Can El Salvador's president-elect break the previous parties' hold on power?

By Associated Press

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — El Salvador’s new president-elect won in resounding fashion, but breaking the three-decade hold on power of the country’s two dominant parties means that Nayib Bukele will take office with few friends in Congress.

The 37-year-old former mayor has an ambitious agenda, topped by a vow to root out corruption. To accomplish that and many other campaign promises, Bukele will have to find allies who can help.

Bukele won with more than 53 percent of the votes Sunday, topping three rivals. But GANA — the Grand Alliance for National Unity party that he carried to victory — has only 10 seats in the legislature, well short of the 43 votes needed to pass laws.

“This new government is going to be weak,” said Alvaro Artiga, a professor of political science and sociology at the Jose Simeon Canas Central American University. “It’s that institutionally it doesn’t have legislative support.”

The outgoing Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front, or FMLN, government had a difficult time of it as a minority presence in the Legislative Assembly, and it had 23 of the 84 seats.

And Bukele’s promise to establish a commission to investigate official corruption modeled on a U.N.-backed effort in Guatemala is unlikely to win him friends among the FMLN or the conservative Nationalist Republican Alliance, or ARENA. That party itself has 37 deputies and its allied parties have 12 more.

Bukele will need to send a message immediately through his cabinet picks that it won’t be business as usual, and avoid cronyism, Artiga said. “It can’t be the friends, the relatives, all that he has accused the usual suspects of,” he said.

source: nbcnews.com