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    Can a Chávista become a Lulaista?

    This post is also available in: Português Español

    As political makeovers go, Peruvian presidential contender Ollanta Humala’s has been striking. The former army officer backed a military coup in 2005, and was the consummate outsider during his first bid for Peru’s highest office a year later. He ran proudly as a fiercely anti-system candidate and a self-proclaimed admirer of Venezuela’s populist, leftist president Hugo Chávez, losing a runoff by 5 percent to current president Alan Garcia. In 2011, however, Humala has tried to make the case that he is the epitome of prudence and moderation, portraying himself less as a Peruvian Chávez as the second coming of Brazil’s wildly popular former president Luiz Iniacio Lula da Silva. The question is: Will Peruvians buy the conversion?

     

    Read the complete article in Foreign Policy.

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