home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93CT1678>
- <title>
- Ecuador--History
- </title>
- <history>
- Compact ALMANAC--CIA Factbook
- South America
- Ecuador
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>CIA World Factbook</source>
- <hdr>
- History
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The Inca Empire, which had conquered the modern territory of
- Ecuador less than 100 years before the arrival of the
- Spaniards, fell to the conquistadores in 1532. In 1563, this
- area was made a royal audiencia of Spain with its seat at Quito.
- It was later incorporated into the Viceroyalty of New Granada.
- After the War of Independence ended in 1822, Simon Bolivar
- joined Ecuador with the Republic of Greater Colombia, but in
- 1830 Ecuador seceded and became a separate republic. The 19th
- century was a period of political instability, and Ecuador's
- first 95 years as a republic were marked by a succession of 40
- presidents, dictators, and juntas.
- </p>
- <p> The years 1925 through 1948 were even more troubled. No
- president completed his term of office; during this 23-year
- period Ecuador had 22 presidents or chiefs of state. Stability
- was reestablished when Galo Plaza Lasso (subsequently Secretary
- General of the Organization of American States), was elected
- president in free elections in 1948, and completed his
- constitutional 4-year term. Plaza's accomplishment was repeated
- by Jose Maria Velasco Ibarra (1952-56) and Camilo Ponce
- (1956-60).
- </p>
- <p> Velasco Ibarra won the presidential elections again in 1960
- but was forced out of office in 1961 after a period of economic
- problems and political turbulence. Vice President Carlos Julio
- Arosemena succeeded him. Less than 2 years later the armed
- forces ousted President Arosemena and created a four-member
- junta to replace him.
- </p>
- <p> Nearly 3 years of military rule ended in 1966 with the
- appointment of an interim civilian president, Clemente Yerovi.
- Yerovi supervised the election of a Constituent Assembly which
- named Dr. Otto Arosemena interim constitutional president. When
- elections were finally held in 1968, the results allowed
- Velasco to begin his fifth term as president. However, student
- riots and financial problems quickly undermined his position.
- In 1970, with the support of the armed forces, Velasco dissolved
- Congress, and reorganized the Supreme Court. Despite these
- measures, in early 1972, the military deposed him for a fourth
- time.
- </p>
- <p> The ensuing regime of Army Gen. Guillermo Rodriguez Lara
- lasted 4 years before his ouster by other military officers.
- The new government, led by Adm. Alfredo Poveda, paved the way
- for the resumption of civilian government in 1979.
- </p>
- <p> Jaime Roldos, a protege of charismatic Guyaquil politician
- Assad Bucaram, was inaugurated president in 1979, beginning a
- new era of civilian rule. His brief term in office was marked
- by sharp conflicts with the Congress and with his former
- mentor, Bucaram. Roldos, a populist, brought Christian Democrat
- Osvaldo Hurtado with him as vice president. In May 1981, Roldos
- died in an airplane crash, and Hurtado ascended to the
- presidency.
- </p>
- <p> During his 3-year tenure, Hurtado pursued a course of
- moderate change and economic development marked, at times, by
- financial difficulties. Devastating flooding caused by the "El
- Nino" phenomenon did enormous damage to the country's
- agriculture and roads and sparked considerable social unrest.
- </p>
- <p> The 1984 presidential campaign evolved into a bitter contest
- between Social Democrat Rodrigo Borja and Social Christian Leon
- Febres Cordero. The latter won by a narrow margin and began his
- term in August of that year. Much of Febres Cordero's first
- year in office was characterized by political wrangling with an
- opposition-dominated Congress, but by the start of his second
- year, the president was able to build a fragile congressional
- majority of his own. The 1986 congressional elections produced
- another opposition-dominated Congress.
- </p>
- <p>Political Conditions
- </p>
- <p> Ecuador's political parties have historically been small,
- loose organizations that depended more on populist, often
- charismatic, leaders than on programs or ideology. Frequent
- internal splits produced extreme factionalism.
- </p>
- <p> To encourage the development of strong, stable political
- parties, the constitution places various restrictions on
- potential candidates. Only candidates affiliated with
- registered political parties may run for elective office. To be
- certified, an aspiring party must file a petition signed by a
- number of unaffiliated citizens equal to at least 1.5% of the
- number of valid votes cast in the previous national election.
- The party must then field candidates in at least 10 of the
- country's provinces, including two of the three most populous.
- </p>
- <p> The 1986 congressional and local elections proved that
- political fragmentism continues to exist. Sixteen highly
- diverse parties, including two communist parties, contested the
- election. Thirteen political parties are currently represented
- in the Congress. Of these, only two hold more than eight seats.
- </p>
- <p> While the 1984 presidential elections were won by
- conservative Social Christian Leon Febres Cordero, the 1986
- mid-term congressional elections gave a solid majority to the
- multiparty leftist "Progressive Bloc," which has indicated that
- it will oppose the president on many issues. The Democratic Left
- Party, led by unsuccessful presidential candidate Rodrigo Borja,
- has emerged as the largest opposition party. Immediate past
- president Osvaldo Hurtado is a prominent opposition spokesman,
- although he holds no public office of the Popular Democracy
- Party. President Febres Cordero's Social Christian Party is the
- clear leader of the government-allied "National Reconstruction
- Front" Populist parties and independents make up the remainder
- of the Congress.
- </p>
- <p>Source: U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Public Affairs,
- October 1986.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-