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The Record and Herald News - Tue Dec 8, 6:05 pm ET
Police officers carry a statue of the Virgin of Cotoca during Virgin Day celebrations in Cotoca, southeast of Bolivia, Tuesday, Dec. 8, 2009. There are no current comments at this time. Be the first to post one!
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Washington Post - Mon Dec 7, 12:00 am ET
BOLIVIA President Evo Morales easily won reelection Sunday, according to unofficial results, getting an overwhelming mandate for further revolutionary change on behalf of Bolivia's long-suppressed indigenous majority.
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The Christian Science Monitor - Mon Dec 7, 10:13 am ET
His presidential victory Sunday chalks up another important win for Bolivia's Evo Morales and the region's hard-left, Chávez-led bloc, which also includes Ecuador, Nicaragua, and Cuba.
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AP via Yahoo! News - Sun Dec 6, 10:36 pm ET
President Evo Morales easily won re-election Sunday, according to unofficial results, getting an overwhelming mandate for further revolutionary change on behalf of Bolivia's long-suppressed indigenous majority.
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Bloomberg - Mon Dec 7, 8:20 am ET
Dec. 7 (Bloomberg) -- The wind whips across a 3,900-square- mile expanse of salt on a desert plateau in Bolivia’s Andes Mountains. Plastic washtubs filled with an emerald-colored liquid rich in lithium dot the Uyuni Salt Flat, all the way to the volcanoes on the horizon.
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AP via Yahoo! News - Sun Dec 6, 6:43 pm ET
President Evo Morales appeared headed to easy re-election Sunday with a strong mandate for further revolutionary change on behalf of Bolivia's long-suppressed indigenous majority.
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AP via Yahoo! News - Sun Dec 6, 4:46 pm ET
President Evo Morales was highly favored to win re-election on Sunday in balloting expected to further spur revolutionary change on behalf of Bolivia's long-suppressed indigenous majority.
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New York Times - Sun Dec 6, 2:08 pm ET
President Evo Morales seems to be sailing to re-election Sunday just as his indigenous movement continues to shake Bolivia’s institutions.
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Reuters via Yahoo! News - Sun Dec 6, 2:00 pm ET
President Evo Morales, whose leftist economic policies have made him broadly popular with Bolivia's poor but angered business leaders, is expected to win re-election on Sunday, allowing him to expand state control over the economy.
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Diario Las Americas - Mon Dec 7, 2:06 pm ET
This Sunday, December 6th, Bolivia held elections for President and members of Congress. Evo Morales, with the extraordinary financial resources of Chávezs petrodollars, won again by a wide mar....
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WashingtonTV - Mon Dec 7, 2:07 pm ET
Washington, 7 December (WashingtonTV)—Bolivia’s President Evo Morales appeared to have easily won re-election on Sunday, according to unofficial results.
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Reuters via Yahoo! News - Mon Dec 7, 6:51 pm ET
Leftist Bolivian President Evo Morales vowed on Monday to increase state control over the economy and strengthen political power for indigenous groups, a day after exit polls showed he was re-elected in a landslide.
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AFP via Yahoo! News - Sun Dec 6, 7:13 am ET
Polls opened Sunday in Bolivia's general election that is likely to deliver Evo Morales another five-year term in office and consolidate the anti-American president's hold on power.
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U.S. Department of State - Mon Dec 7, 2:57 pm ET
Elections in Bolivia Ian Kelly Department Spokesman Washington, DC December 7, 2009 We congratulate President Evo Morales on his re-election and commend the Bolivian people and their electoral institutions for a peaceful and orderly voting process yesterday. We look forward to working with President Morales and his administration to continue advancing the bilateral dialogue started by our ...
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AFP via Yahoo! News - Tue Dec 8, 3:19 pm ET
Bolivia's newly reelected President Evo Morales boasted Tuesday that he had received congratulations from fellow anti-US figures Fidel Castro of Cuba and President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela.