Nicaragua scraps term limits in boost for socialist Ortega

Nicaragua's President Daniel Ortega (L) hugs his Bolivian counterpart Evo Morales before the march of the torches in celebration of the 161th birth anniversary of Cuba's independence hero Jose Marti in Havana January 27, 2014. REUTERS/Claudia Daut

By Ivan Castro MANAGUA (Reuters) - Nicaragua's national assembly on Tuesday voted to scrap presidential term limits, which could allow socialist President Daniel Ortega to remain in power indefinitely and has stoked concerns about democracy in the Central American country. Lawmakers must still formally sign off on the details of the bill, likely in a vote on Wednesday, which will make the impoverished country the latest in a string of Latin American nations from Bolivia to Ecuador to give presidents power extending beyond their traditional limits. It would allow 68-year-old Ortega, a prominent Cold War antagonist of the United States, to seek a fourth term. He has yet to say publicly whether he wants to run again for the presidency in 2016, but is widely expected to do so. Ortega, a former Marxist guerrilla and ally of the late Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez, has been president since 2007. He first took power after Nicaragua's 1979 revolution and was formally elected president for a single term in 1984. The country's divided opposition has accused him of man-handling the constitution to keep his grip on power and maintains that the reform will increase presidential power at the expense of checks and balances. Ortega's ruling Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) has a majority of seats in the assembly, making final voting on the reform largely a formality. Opposition lawmakers walked out of the chamber in protest after Tuesday's resounding general vote. "These reforms are not necessary," said Eduardo Montealegre, leader of the opposition Liberal Independent Party. "Perhaps they're important for the president because they give him absolute power." Under the new voting rules, candidates can be elected with a simple majority in the first round of voting, avoiding a run-off. Ortega's government in the 1980s was convulsed by a civil war that pitted his Sandinistas against right-wing Contra rebels backed by the administration of U.S. President Ronald Reagan. (Writing by Julia Symmes Cobb; Editing by Simon Gardner and Grant McCool)