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<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>