STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:
Let's catch up on a presidential race in Guatemala. This is an often-troubled country, the source of some migrants who head to the United States from Latin America. Based on what we know, the first round of the election ended with a center-left candidate making a surprise showing into the top two - a runoff. Maria Martin reports from Guatemala.
MARIA MARTIN, BYLINE: No one had seen this coming - not the pollsters, nor the media, nor even his own supporters in the small reformist anti-corruption party called Semilla - seed - which called on people to vote differently.
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UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #1: (Speaking Spanish).
UNIDENTIFIED PEOPLE: (Chanting in Spanish).
MARTIN: Sixty-four-year-old Semilla standard-bearer Bernardo Arevalo, the son of Guatemala's first democratically elected president, won 12% of the vote last Sunday, just a few points behind leading candidate Sandra Torres, who's supported by business and the ruling class. Arevalo says his unexpected second-place finish and the high number of blank and spoiled ballots indicated an overwhelming popular rejection of Guatemala's corrupt status quo.
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BERNARDO AREVALO: (Speaking Spanish).
MARTIN: "People are tired," he says, "of a political system that only generates more poverty, more deterioration and less democracy."
Semilla supporters were thought to be largely limited to urban Guatemala City, and the party had limited financial resources, says political analyst Juan Luis Font.
JUAN LUIS FONT: They were driving their own cars. They didn't have the support of these big financial Guatemalan groups, and they just got it.
MARTIN: Arevalo was able to fly under the radar since he wasn't seen as a threat to the establishment in an election that saw four candidates disqualified. Another plus, say analysts, was that he stuck to his anti-corruption message.
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AREVALO: (Speaking Spanish).
MARTIN: Arevalo says he'll bring back anti-corruption judges and prosecutors in exile as advisers to help him develop his strategy.
Arevalo's challenge in the next seven weeks before the runoff vote is to broaden his party's support outside urban areas, to reach out to the large number of voters who turned in spoiled ballots and to get past the mushrooming negative campaigns on social media.
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UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #2: (Speaking Spanish).
MARTIN: Numerous posts like these paint Arevalo as a communist and a perpetrator of electoral fraud. Meanwhile, Arevalo's opponent, Sandra Torres, says he'd legalize abortion and gay marriage and destroy the country's social fabric.
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SANDRA TORRES: (Through interpreter) Don't let him mess with Guatemalan children and families.
MARTIN: But the negative campaigns appear to be working.
ESTELA MENDEZ: (Speaking Spanish).
MARTIN: Hairdresser Estela Mendez says everyone at her salon says she should be afraid of Arevalo. Now she's confused. Meanwhile, there's a court challenge underway that may stop his candidacy, while the OAS and the EU are calling on Guatemala's government to respect the popular will. For NPR News, I'm Maria Martin. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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