Ecuador's
ruling-party candidate Lenin Moreno claimed victory Monday night in the
country's presidential election against conservative candidate
Guillermo Lasso, who is yet to acknowledge defeat after several exit
polls showed he was leading by a relatively safe margin.

After
his victory, Moreno tweeted: "With my heart in my hand, I thank all
those who in peace and harmony went to vote. I will be the President of
all and you will help me."
According
to the National Electoral Council, Moreno won 51 percent of the votes
while his right-wing rival Lasso won 49 percent, with more than 94
percent of the votes counted. The head of the council, Juan Pablo Pozo,
declared the results and reportedly said: "Ecuador deserves the ethical
responsibility from its political actors to recognize the democratic
decision made by the people at the ballot box."
However,
Lasso called for a recount, claiming he won by six points according to
three exit polls. "They've toyed with popular will," Lasso told an
Ecuadorian television station Sunday, before the declaration of the
winner, according to Reuters.
After
Moreno won, Lasso posted on Twitter: "Let's not be provoked. We will
act democratically and with respect for authorities but firmly to defend
the people's will. We're not fools, nor are the Ecuadorian people."
The
leftist government has been in power for the last three elections under
President Rafael Correa whose policies helped improve access to
healthcare and education, as well to reduce poverty. However, his
government was also criticized for corruption, media censorship and also
for not adhering to many of its environmental promises. On the other
side, Lasso offered a pro-business program, which promised tax cuts and
an increase in the number of jobs in the country of 15 million. But his
alternative sounded contradictory to his own actions; Lasso is accused
of tax avoidance through several offshore accounts, according to the Guardian.
President Rafael
Correa, who supported Moreno in the election, celebrated the outcome
and said "The moral fraud of the right-wing won't go unpunished,"
referring to Lasso's claims that he was winning based on three exit
polls.
Numerous
supporters of Lasso protested outside the electoral council office
Sunday night, shouting "No to fraud, yes to democracy!," according to
Reuters. Reacting on Twitter, Correa said: "Outbreaks of violence in
Quito, Esmeraldas, Ibarra and Azogues. That they fail at the ballot box,
they want to achieve it by force."
Moreno's
victory also came as a relief for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who
has been living at the Ecuadorian embassy in London since he was
granted asylum under Correa's government in 2012. Lasso had promised to
ask Assange to leave the embassy, if he was elected, calling the
WikiLeaks founder a burden on the country's taxpayers, USA Today reported. Assange
took shelter in the embassy while fighting against his extradition to
Sweden, where he is wanted on allegations of sexual misconduct.
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