Politics, Business & Culture in the Americas

Ecuador

Salazar, 42, is Ecuador's first career prosecutor to ascend to the top job.
Ecuador’s Crusading Attorney General Is Facing Her Toughest Challenge Yet

Diana Salazar’s investigations have taken down major figures. But a wave of drug-related violence is changing what defending the rule of law looks like.

Mexico

Migrants travel through Tapachula in southern Mexico in Oct. 2023. The next administration in Mexico should work more closely with its neighbors to address migration.
Mexico Needs a New Strategy for the Northern Triangle

The next administration should work more closely with its neighbors to address migration.

Podcast

AQ Podcast: Why Argentines Seem to Be Sticking With Milei

Despite recession and inflation, Milei has maintained his popularity. The reason for that lies in part in a lack of alternatives.

Guatemala

Guatemalan President Bernardo Arévalo speaks during a press conference in Guatemala City in April 2024. The center-left president has made small gains in his first 100 days in office, though slow progress is setting off alarm bells among supporters.
Arévalo Wants to Change Guatemala. Some Say He’s Moving Too Slowly.

The center-left president has made small gains in his first 100 days in office, though slow progress is setting off alarm bells among supporters.

Mexico

A girl walks by silhouettes of wooden women placed in front of the Metropolitan Cathedral in Mexico City to mark the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women on Nov. 25, 2023. Gender-based violence Is at the center of Mexico’s security crisis, and a recent mob attack underscores the need to recognize the gendered dimensions of violence in a critical election year.
Violence Against Women Is at the Center of Mexico’s Security Crisis

A recent mob attack underscores the need to recognize the gendered dimensions of violence in a critical election year.

Brazil

Despite Record-Low Murder Rates, Brazilians Feel Less Safe

Homicide rates have fallen steadily in recent years, but over a third of Brazil’s public believe that violence has increased since Lula took office.

Podcast

AQ Podcast: Warning Lights for Brazil’s Economy?

What to expect from Latin America’s largest economy in 2024

Mexico

Mexico's presidential candidates exchanged accusations in the first debate held in Mexico City on April 7, 2024.
Should Investors Take a Sheinbaum Victory for Granted in Mexico?

Claudia Sheinbaum’s win in June is not inevitable, and the race could bring an unexpected post-vote scenario.

Colombia

Petro’s Healthcare Move Reveals His New Governing Strategy

The Colombian president’s intervention into major private health insurers reflects growing frustration over obstacles to his reform agenda.

Chile

Brine pools at a Sociedad Química y Minera de Chile (SQM) lithium mine on Chile's Atacama salt flat in March 2024. Can Chile meet the moment on Lithium? The Boric administration’s lithium strategy, launched last year, has been met with some skepticism.
Can Chile Meet the Moment on Lithium?

The Boric administration’s lithium strategy, launched last year, has been met with some skepticism.

Ecuador

What Ecuador’s Embassy Drama Means for Noboa

The raid on the Mexican embassy in Quito to seize a convicted former vice president hurts the president’s international prospects, but might help him domestically.

Panama

Former Panamanian president and presidential candidate Ricardo Martinelli (R) and vice-presidential candidate Jose Raul Mulino participate in a political rally in Panama City on February 3, 2024. Martinelli kicked off his campaign for the May 5 presidential election on Saturday at a rally with thousands of supporters, a day after his candidacy was put at risk by an unappealable court ruling.
Martinelli’s Shadow Still Dominates Panama Election

The former president’s proxy candidate, José Raúl Mulino, leads the polls ahead of the May 5 vote.

Podcast

AQ Podcast | Venezuela: Maduro’s and the Opposition’s Strategies

A look at what Nicolás Maduro and the opposition are hoping to accomplish with the July 28th election, which virtually nobody expects to be free or fair

Venezuela

Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro arrives to register his reelection campaign at the National Electoral Council (CNE) in Caracas on Mar. 25.
Maduro Gets His Wish: A Divided Venezuelan Opposition

The July 28 vote may hinge on how Machado and Rosales resolve their differences. Otherwise, regime-controlled institutions will most likely dictate the outcome.

Peru

Peru’s Brewing Migration Storm

As Peru’s deeply unpopular Congress erodes democracy, its citizens are increasingly voting with their feet. Washington can prevent a bigger outflow.

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