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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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AFP via Yahoo! News - Sun Dec 6, 1:27 pm ET
Bolivian President Evo Morales, a fervent anti-US leader, looked poised to easily win re-election on Sunday thanks to overwhelming support from his country's indigenous majority.
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International Herald Tribune - Sun Dec 6, 11:48 am ET
President Evo Morales seems to be sailing to re-election as his indigenous movement continues to shake institutions.
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OfficialWire - Sun Dec 6, 8:27 am ET
Incumbent Evo Morales was favored by a wide margin in Sunday's presidential election in Bolivia, polls indicated. Morales, 50, had strong support from the indigenous majority, which comprises more than 60 percent of Bolivia's population, The New York Times reported.
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EARTHtimes.org - Sun Dec 6, 7:46 am ET
La Paz - Bolivians began voting on Sunday in elections for a a new president and parliament. Four years after taking office, President Evo Morales - Bolivia's first indigenous head of state - was poised for re-election with a first-round majority. ...
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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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Boston Globe - Sun Dec 6, 3:48 am ET
President Evo Morales, a coca-grower at odds with Washington but popular at home for empowering Bolivia's long-suppressed indigenous majority, is expected to coast to easy re-election Sunday.
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Reuters via Yahoo! News - Sun Dec 6, 1:02 am ET
Bolivian President Evo Morales, whose leftist economic policies have made him broadly popular with the 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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AFP via Yahoo! News - Sun Dec 6, 12:59 am ET
About five million Bolivians go to the polls Sunday in an 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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EARTHtimes.org - Sat Dec 5, 4:47 pm ET
Buenos Aires/La Paz - Four years after taking office, Evo Morales, Bolivia's first president of indigenous descent, is poised for re-election with a first-round majority. A year ago, Bolivia seemed haunted by the ghosts of civil war, with deep divisi...
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NPR - Sat Dec 5, 9:33 am ET
Bolivia's President Evo Morales has nationalized natural gas reserves, ushered in a new constitution and redistributed land to his nation's poor, indigenous majority. He also kicked out the U.S. ambassador as well as U.S. drug enforcement authorities. Like him or loathe him, Bolivia's first indigenous president has made headlines. Sunday, Bolivians will decide whether to re-elect him. He's ...
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Heritage Foundation - Fri Dec 4, 4:47 pm ET
On December 6, national elections will be held in Bolivia. If President Evo Morales (Bolivia's version of Venezuela's populist authoritarian President Hugo Chavez) and his MAS party prevail, Morales's campaign to destroy constitutional democracy in Bolivia will be nearly complete.
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Boston Globe - Fri Dec 4, 1:48 pm ET
In Bolivia's biggest municipality, a scrub-brush expanse of cattle ranches and hardscrabble farms, Sunday's national elections aren't all about Evo Morales.
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Bloomberg - Fri Dec 4, 8:59 am ET
Dec. 4 (Bloomberg) -- Bolivian President Evo Morales , who nationalized the energy industry and rewrote the constitution, heads for re-election Dec. 6 bolstered by an economy projected to grow faster than any other in the hemisphere this year.