San Salvador (EFE).- The Salvadoran president, Nayib Bukele, registered his candidacy to seek re-election in the 2024 elections, despite the allegations of unconstitutionality that he himself maintained in the past, according to the party reported at midnight this Monday pro-government New Ideas (NI).
“We inform the Salvadoran people that President @nayibbukele (Nayib Bukele) and Vice President @fulloa51 (Félix Ulloa), are already registered as pre-candidates for President and Vice President of the Republic of El Salvador, in the largest party in the history of El Salvador”, published NI on Twitter in a message that Bukele shared on his profile.
Bukele announced his intention to be re-elected in September 2022, one year after a change of criteria by the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court of Justice.
A change aligned with Bukele’s intention
Until before the decision of the constitutionalist judges, elected in a process markedly irregular in the Legislative Assembly with an official majority after dismissing their predecessors, a president had to wait ten years to try to seek the Presidency again.
The resolution states that to seek a new term, the president must request a license “six months before the start of the presidential term.” In other words, Bukele would only govern the first six months of his fifth year and should step down from the Presidency in January 2024.
Various lawyers, including the Faculty of Jurisprudence of the state University of El Salvador, have indicated that Bukele’s re-election would entail the violation of various articles of the Constitution, such as the one that states that the person who has held the Presidency will not be able to “continue in his functions not one more day”.
Bukele came to power in 2019 with the far-right party Gran Alianza por la Unidad Nacional (Gana) as the electoral vehicle after the registration delay of his NI party, led by one of his cousins.