Despite a Strong Start, Ecuador’s Lasso Has His Work Cut Out for Him

Despite a Strong Start, Ecuador’s Lasso Has His Work Cut Out for Him
Ecuadorean President Guillermo Lasso holds the “Baston de Mando,” or baton of authority, during an Indigenous ceremony in Tamboloma, Ecuador, May 26, 2021 (AP photo by Dolores Ochoa).

At his swearing-in ceremony as Ecuador’s new president in late May, Guillermo Lasso promised to usher in a new political era in the South American nation ravaged by COVID-19, an economic slump and autocratic hyper-partisanship.

“I have not come to satisfy the hate of a few but the hunger of many,” the conservative former banker and Coca-Cola executive told the National Assembly, in a message clearly aimed at healing and unifying the country. “My strength will not come from how much I raise my voice to shout but rather from how much I listen to the people before I speak.”

Since then, Lasso, 65, has made a respectable start toward turning that lofty rhetoric into public policies that will have a positive impact on ordinary Ecuadorians’ lives, despite his CREO party having just 12 of the 137 seats in the unicameral legislature.

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