Guatemalan presidential candidate Bernardo Arevalo stood before a few hundred residents of a small indigenous community on the slopes of the Agua Volcano and told them they could be the seeds of a brighter, more corruption-free spring in Guatemala.
The metaphor fits neatly with his political party, the Seed Movement, and allows the 64-year-old academic and former diplomat to riff on themes of renewal and growth.
However, it also alludes to Guatemala’s “democratic spring,” considered a more inclusive period in the nation’s history during the presidency in the 1940s and early 1950s of his late father, Juan Jose Arevalo.
Bernardo Arevalo won just 11 percent of the vote in the presidential election’s first round on June 25, but it was enough to give him the surprise second slot in the Aug. 20 runoff ballot. He is to face Sandra Torres, a conservative and former first lady who was the leading vote-getter in the first round and is making her third bid for the presidency.
His recent speech in Santa Maria de Jesus was similar to those he has given in Guatemala’s capital, but the imagery could be especially important in rural indigenous communities, as he seeks to rapidly expand his largely urban, youthful base before the runoff.
He won in Guatemala City and other important cities, including Sacatepequez and Quetzaltenango. It remains to be seen whether he can convince people in rural communities that he can address their daily problems.
The delayed certification of the first round results shortened the already small window that Bernardo Arevalo has to reintroduce himself to much of the country as his opponents rush to paint their own negative picture.
“Do you feel what is happening?” he told the crowd in Santa Maria de Jesus. “The new spring is arriving, that’s what you feel, and you all are the seeds of that new spring.”
“A new spring that is going to bring us well-being, the water we lack, the education they owe us, the health that they have denied us thanks to those corrupt contracts that serve few,” Bernardo Arevalo said, standing in front of an old, damaged Roman Catholic church, in a wide-brimmed hat and untucked shirt against the tropical heat.
Among those listening was Juana Oron, a 67-year-old homemaker of the Kaqchikel people. She is one of the older voters who remember hearing about Bernardo Arevalo’s father, one of only two leftist presidents in Guatemala’s democratic era.
The elder Arevalo, who governed from 1945 to 1951, is credited with establishing key social programs that remain in place today, including Guatemala’s labor code and social security. Guatemala’s democratic spring was cut short in 1954 by the CIA-backed overthrow of his successor, President Jacobo Arbenz.
Under Juan Jose Arevalo, the state advocated for rights for indigenous peoples and others beyond the country’s small elite.
“I remember I was little and [my parents] said he had done good things,” said Oron whose first language as a child was Kaqchikel. If his father was good, Bernardo Arevalo could be a good president, too, she said.
Opponents have tried to frame Bernardo Arevalo’s candidacy as a step toward some of the region’s more notorious leftist regimes, such as Cuba and Nicaragua. They warn that the progressive candidate will bring expropriations, abortion and same-sex marriage to the conservative country.
Arevalo has been the election’s surprise.
In the days before the June 25 vote, he was polling below 3 percent and trailing at least seven of the other 21 candidates. However, his anti-corruption message resonated in the country where gains against corruption have been erased, and the justice system reoriented to pursue the prosecutors and judges who formerly led that fight.
In the month since that initial result, the Attorney General’s Office announced an investigation into his party and had a judge suspend its legal status until the Constitutional Court stepped in to block that move.
In Santa Maria de Jesus, people wanted to compare Bernardo Arevalo in person to what they were hearing about him. Some handed him flowers, posed for photographs or reached out to touch him, as he made his way through the throng.
Bernardo Arevalo pushed back against attempts to frame him as a left-wing radical — he has said private property rights are not up for discussion — and pounded the issue of corruption.
“Let us work, let us get ahead on our own effort, let’s get rid of the corrupt once and for all,” he said.
For Francisco Jimenez, a political scientist at Rafael Landivar University, Bernardo Arevalo would need concrete proposals to make inroads with the base of Torres, who has spent two decades assembling it.
“He will have to make governing proposals with a social agenda, where the people see that he is going to have an impact on their lives and communities,” Jimenez said. “The other part is continuing to present himself as the different model. That has been his success, someone totally different from the other candidates.”
Evangelical churches in Guatemala have painted Bernardo Arevalo as an existential threat to the family.
Gladys Sunun, a 35-year-old Kaqchikel vendor from an evangelical family, said she came to hear Bernardo Arevalo for herself.
She said she had heard that he would convert Guatemala into another Cuba or Nicaragua, but left feeling that might not be true, though she wants to investigate more.
“He came to tell us not to worry,” she said. “It sounds real, but we don’t know.”
Her sister July Sunun said she wanted to hear more about Bernardo Arevalo’s positions on gender ideology.
“As a mother I’m afraid, because we’ve grown up with a Christian background. I don’t want to marry my daughter with another woman,” she said.
July Sunun acknowledged that Bernardo Arevalo said he would respect the identities and decisions of the people, “but what he hasn’t said is that he won’t allow [same-sex marriage] to happen here.”
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