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and then Alejandro Toledo, and Colombia, with Álvaro Uribe. Caudillos like Venezuela's Hugo Chávez and Ecuador's Rafael Correa have bucked entrenched but sclerotic party systems. And leaders of broad movements have brought an end to decades-long
his friends—Hugo Chávez in Venezuela, Daniel Ortega in Nicaragua, the FMLN in El Salvador, Evo Morales in Bolivia, Rafael Correa in Ecuador, and, chiefly, the Castro brothers in Cuba—made his restoration a matter of life and death in Latin America
President Álvaro Uribe. Some did it graciously, like the leaders of Brazil and Chile; others, like Hugo Chávez of Venezuela, Rafael Correa of Ecuador, and Evo Morales of Bolivia, did it stridently, as is their wont. But everyone seemed to agree there was more
essentially aligned themselves with Venezuela's Hugo Chávez and his left-wing allies—Nicaragua's Daniel Ortega, Rafael Correa from Ecuador, and Evo Morales from Bolivia—in their condemnation of the coup. Now they ought to rectify that error by reaffirming
emulated the comandante 's mix of muscle and populist hubris. Both Evo Morales, Bolivia's first indigenous president, and Rafael Correa , the U.S.- and Belgian-trained economist, parlayed their cachet among the poor and forgotten ethnic minorities into sweeping
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