With a discredited electoral body, economic meltdown and a fragmented political map, Bolivia faces elections that could trigger an institutional explosion.
Javier Milei has become a symbolic reference for opposition candidates who appeal to the economic malaise and promise a 'chainsaw' to cut state spending in a country tired of almost 20 years of leftist governments.
Justice in Mexico crossed the threshold of the popular vote without technical guidance or clear citizen support, marking the beginning of a new constitutional era that is as unprecedented as it is uncertain.
The democratic opposition does not only face the challenge of channeling fragmented social demands: it faces a punitive legal framework designed to prevent its consolidation.