AMB LEON: VP CANDIDATE ZABLAH TO BOOST TICKET
Publicado el 28 de Junio de 2011
id: 176560
date: 11/3/2008 21:49
refid: 08SANSALVADOR1250
origin: Embassy San Salvador
classification: CONFIDENTIAL
destination:
header:
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PP RUEHWEB
DE RUEHSN #1250 3082149
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
P 032149Z NOV 08
FM AMEMBASSY SAN SALVADOR
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 0269
INFO RUEHZA/WHA CENTRAL AMERICAN COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
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C O N F I D E N T I A L SAN SALVADOR 001250
SIPDIS
E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/31/2018
TAGS: PGOV, PREL, ES
SUBJECT: AMB LEON: VP CANDIDATE ZABLAH TO BOOST TICKET
Classified By: Robert I. Blau, CDA, for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d)
1. (C) Summary: Rene Leon, Salvadoran Ambassador to the U.S.
and platform coordinator for the Avila campaign told PolCouns
October 30 that he believes that (center-right, pro-U.S.)
ARENA presidential candidate Rodrigo Avila,s selection of
former Minister of Economy Arturo Zablah as his vice
presidential running mate will help ARENA win the March 15
presidential election. He expressed concern with what he
described as plans by the (left-wing) FMLN to lay the
groundwork for protests and possible violence in the event
the FMLN loses the election. He said that ARENA,s internal
tracking polls following the Zablah announcement place Avila
about two points behind FMLN candidate Mauricio Funes. Leon
said that he expected Avila,s platform would be complete by
the end of November and that it would provide an added boost
in the polls. End Summary.
2. (C) Rene Leon, Salvadoran Ambassador to the U.S. on a
leave of absence to serve as platform coordinator for the
Avila campaign told PolCouns October 30 he was pleased with
Avila's choice of Arturo Zablah as his running mate and
believes Zablah will help Avila win the March 15 presidential
vote. Leon was critical of ARENA's legislative slate, which
he assessed could have been better constructed. Given the
risk of ARENA spending several years in opposition, he said,
the party (and Avila) should have included more subject
matter experts in defense, security, and fiscal policy.
While the candidate slate does include several new faces, he
said, it will neither generate excitement among voters nor
leave ARENA well positioned in opposition.
3. (C) Leon was concerned with what he described as moves by
the (left-wing) FMLN's presidential candidate Mauricio Funes
to lay the groundwork for an election protest with incendiary
rhetoric about fraud and hinting ARENA might try to steal the
election. Leon noted that if the FMLN wins the presidential
election, theFMLN will make no claims of irregularities, but
are preparing the way for protests and, possibly, violence,
if the results do not favor Funes.
4. (C) Leon described the recent evolution of ARENA's
internal tracking polls. He said that after Avila's July 13
event at San Salvador's Cuscatlan Stadium, he had risen to a
one-point lead over Funes. When fuel prices subsequently
spiked, he dropped to a seven-point deficit. Following the
October 9 announcement of Zablah as Avila's running mate, he
climbed to a consistent deficit of about two points. Leon
said ARENA campaign director Cesar Funes (no relation to
Mauricio Funes) was hoping for a five point lead by
Christmas, which Leon believes is unrealistic. Leon said he
would be extremely satisfied to enter the holiday season with
a consistent, credible lead of two points.
5. (C) Leon said he hoped to have Avila's platform completed
by the end of November. He said he was pleased with Avila's
improving focus at campaign events and expected the platform
to provide a further boost in the polls. Leon said he hoped
Zablah would not simply provide a short boost with party
faithful followed by a longer-term drag on ARENA's candidacy,
something he said was a distinct possibility. Leon said the
campaign was working to focus Zablah's efforts on four
themes: Pledging to end abuses of power; recognizing and
offering solutions to economic pressures on Salvadoran
families; subtly signaling separation between Avila and
current Salvadoran President Elias Antonio "Tony" Saca and
distancing Avila from rumors of corruption in the Saca
administration; and, providing assurance that an Avila-Zablah
administration will address the economic crisis facing El
Salvador.
6. (C) Leon, who worked for Zablah during the Cristiani
administration (1989-1994) said he believed that while Zablah
was fully on message with Avila now, the honeymoon during an
Avila-Zablah administration would be short, perhaps only
three months, at which point "both will want a divorce."
7. (C) Comment: Despite being behind in public polls, ARENA
believes it can and will win the March 15 presidential
elections. While privately funded polls in the
(right-leaning) Salvadoran media have consistently shown
Funes with about a four-point lead, San Salvador's
Technological University/CIOPS most recent poll gave Funes an
eighteen point advantage, consistent with other university
polls in recent weeks. Funes' reaction to the divergent
numbers was to make a public statement suggesting
ARENA-instigated fraud. The university numbers are feeding a
sense of certain victory in the FMLN, and lend credence to
Leon's concerns about potential violence should Avila pull
out a win.
BLAU
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