Creating Opportunities Explained

Country:Ecuador
Abbreviation:CREO
Creating Opportunities
Native Name:Creando Oportunidades (CREO)
Founder:Guillermo Lasso
President:Esteban Bernal
Headquarters:Av. Quito 2502 y Gomez Rendon, Guayaquil, Ecuador
Position:Centre-right
Seats1 Title:Seats in the National Assembly
Seats3 Title:Prefects
Seats4 Title:Mayors
Membership:184,299 (2016) [1]
Regional:Union of Latin American Parties[2]
International:International Democracy Union[3]
Website:creo.com.ec

Creating Opportunities (Spanish; Castilian: Creando Oportunidades, CREO; the acronym means, and also means) is a centre-right[4] political party in Ecuador.[5] In the 2021 general election, its leader, Guillermo Lasso was elected for president.[6]

Ideology

Generally considered a centre-right conservative outfit, CREO's candidate in the 2021 presidential elections ran on a more centrist platform: his economic development model was mainly market-oriented and favoring entrepreneurship, but also promised state support to micro-enterprises and upgrading of education. With liberal conservatism[7] [8] [9] and classical liberalism[10] [11] [12] [13] being the party's two main ideologies.

Lasso promoted an independent judiciary and free speech (the opposition and civil rights organizations consider judicial autonomy and press freedom to be threatened under the administration of President Rafael Correa).

History

In the 2013 presidential election, Lasso was placed second with 22.7% of the votes, having been endorsed also by the Social Christian Party and the Madera de Guerrero movement of Guayaquil's mayor Jaime Nebot. In the simultaneous election for the National Assembly, the party won 11.4% of the votes and 11 out of 137 seats. Hence, it is the major opposition force in parliament.

In the 2014 local elections, CREO obtained 22 mayorships, including those of provincial capitals such as Azogues, Riobamba and Tena, besides the Loja prefecture. In that same year, CREO lead the creation of "Ecuador Compromise" (Compromiso Ecuador) formed by various opposition groups and guilds, including the Migrants Movement led by Luis Felipe Tilleria, and supported by several political figures from across the Ecuadorian political spectrum. The context of its creation was a government-sponsored project for a series of constitutional amendments by the National Assembly, which led to the opposition collective to unsuccessfully ask for a referendum on the matter, with special focus on the amendment that would pave the way for elected incumbents to seek indefinite reelection. In September 2016, CREO was admitted as member of the Union of Latin American Parties, the regional subsidiary of the International Democracy Union.[14]

For the 2017 general elections Lasso and his movement agreed with the SUMA Party to form the (Alianza por el Cambio) to run on an anti-Correa platform, along with several other smaller groups.[15]

Lasso ran as a candidate again in the 2021 general election.[16] In the first round, Lasso was slightly behind indigenous rights activist Yaku Pérez Guartambel, but eventually garnered enough votes to secure a narrow second-place finish.[17] Lasso would face socialist and Rafael Correa ally Andrés Arauz.[17] He defeated Arauz in the April run-off election, with many news outlets noting the conservative shift among the Ecuadorian electorate.[18] Lasso's victory was also seen as a win for free-market advocates in the country.[11] [19] President-elect Lasso finished second in the 2013 and 2017 presidential elections.[20] On 24 May 2021, Guillermo Lasso was sworn in as the new President of Ecuador, becoming the country's first right-wing leader in 14 years.[21]

Election Results

Presidential Elections

YearCandidatesFirst RoundPlaceSecond RoundPlace
PresidentVice PresidentVotes%Votes%
2013Guillermo LassoJuan Carlos Solines1,951,1022nd
2017Guillermo Lasso2,652,4032nd4,833,3892nd
2021Guillermo LassoAlfredo Borrero Vega1,830,1722nd4,656,4261st

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 3,5 millones de firmas avalan a 16 grupos políticos. El. Telégrafo. September 6, 2016. El Telégrafo.
  2. Web site: Partidos Miembros. July 6, 2020. March 31, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220331204506/http://uplalatinoamerica.org/partidos-miembros/. dead.
  3. https://www.idu.org/members/
  4. Web site: Lasso, el conservador que giró al centro político para presidir Ecuador.
  5. Web site: El CNE habilitó al movimiento CREO. January 23, 2012. El Universo.
  6. Web site: Ecuador's Guillermo Lasso Wins Presidential Election . Dube . Ryan . The Wall Street Journal . April 11, 2021 . April 13, 2021.
  7. Web site: El conservador Guillermo Lasso ganó y será el próximo presidente de Ecuador. April 11, 2021.
  8. News: Conservador Guillermo Lasso asume las riendas de Ecuador. La Nación. May 24, 2021.
  9. Web site: Remontada histórica del conservador Guillermo Lasso y varapalo al correísmo en las elecciones de Ecuador. April 12, 2021.
  10. Web site: Guillermo Lasso: Mi vida me hizo liberal. 9 May 2012. El Universo. es. 27 May 2020.
  11. Web site: Ecuador's Guillermo Lasso Wins Presidential Election. The Wall Street Journal. 11 April 2021.
  12. Web site: El liberal que puede tumbar el socialismo en Ecuador... Si no hay 'pucherazo'. February 22, 2017.
  13. Web site: Ecuador inicia un giro liberal.
  14. Web site: CREO se incorpora a la Unión de Partidos Latinoamericanos | La República EC. September 11, 2016.
  15. Web site: Alianza por el Cambio, nueva plataforma electoral de Guillermo Lasso. October 29, 2016. El Universo.
  16. News: McDonnell . Patrick J. . Jaramillo Viteri . Pablo . Shadow of COVID-19 and economic downturn hovers over elections in Ecuador and Peru . 11 April 2021 . . 11 April 2021.
  17. Web site: Leftist Arauz, conservative Lasso advance to Ecuador presidential run-off. Buenos Aires Times. 22 February 2021.
  18. Web site: Ecuador goes with conservative banker in presidential vote. Associated Press. 11 April 2021.
  19. Web site: Ecuador's Lasso pledges deficit cuts, new oil deals after election win. April 12, 2021. Reuters.
  20. News: Guillermo Lasso: Conservative ex-banker elected Ecuador president. BBC News. 12 April 2021.
  21. Web site: Lasso inaugurated as first right-wing Ecuador president in 14 years. May 24, 2021. France 24.