Nobel laureate returning to lead divided Costa Rica
By John McPhaul
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (Reuters) – Nobel laureate Oscar Arias
begins a second stint as president of Costa Rica on Monday,
taking power in a nation divided over free trade with the
United States and widely seen as rudderless.
Dignitaries from around the world, including former Polish
President Lech Walesa, another Nobel Peace Prize winner,
arrived over the weekend and met with the president-elect. U.S.
First Lady Laura Bush was expected to attend Monday’s ceremony.
Arias first served as president during the 1980s, when
Central America was ripped by civil wars. He won the Nobel
Peace Prize for his role in brokering an end to the conflicts.
Now he takes the helm as the nation and region focus on
economic integration. He pledges to put his country of 4
million people on the road to developed-nation status but lacks
a clear mandate after his unexpectedly close election win.
Arias vows to push the Central American Free Trade
Agreement with the United States, or CAFTA, through Congress.
Costa Rica has signed, but has yet to ratify the agreement
already passed by the United States, Guatemala, Honduras, El
Salvador, Nicaragua and the Dominican Republic.
But Arias, who was initially expected to win the February 2
race by a landslide, instead squeaked out a 1.12 percent
victory over challenger Otton Solis, a CAFTA opponent.
Arias lacks a legislative majority and must cut deals with
other parties to pass the pact. The Supreme Court has yet to
decide whether a simple majority or a two-thirds vote is needed
to pass it.
Labor groups and popular organizations vow to take to the
streets to stop CAFTA, but Arias is resolute about passing it.
“You should not have the least doubt that in this we will
not cede,” he said recently.
DISENCHANTMENT
He likens himself to former U.S. President Bill Clinton and
British Prime Minister Tony Blair and says he will use his
worldwide acclaim as a Nobel laureate to attract foreign
investment. He also wants to shrink the government.
“We have a state that is too inefficient, sclerotic,
chaotic,” he said. “We need a strong state, not a big state.”
Passing badly needed fiscal reforms is seen as another
major test, and Arias has pledged to push a tax reform bill to
force wealthier Costa Ricans to pay more for infrastructure.
But he faces disenchantment with government after the
ineffectual administration of outgoing President Abel Pacheco.
Pacheco presided over the ruin of his own political party
with revelations in 2004 that two of its former presidents were
briefly jailed over allegations that they received bribes.
Pacheco also handled the controversial CAFTA like a hot
potato, first fully supporting it, then expressing
reservations, firing the economic team that negotiated the deal
and finally saying Costa Ricans would starve without it.
He sent the agreement to Congress but could not muster the
political strength to bring it to a vote. His Social Christian
Unity Party ran last among the main parties in February with
only 3.5 percent of the vote.
Analysts say Arias has a strong Cabinet but his
administration may need more political skill to govern a
country unclear about its direction.
“He has a good team, but their skills seem more
administrative than political and they will need a lot of
political skill,” said political scientist Rodolfo Cerdas.
