Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Alejandro Chafuen in Forbes: Change afoot in Uruguay’s elections?
Alejandro Chafuen in Forbes: Change afoot in Uruguay’s elections?
Jan 8, 2026 4:45 AM

Alejandro Chafuen, Acton’s Managing Director, International, has lectured during two visits to Uruguay this year, and today in Forbes he presents an examination of various candidates and policies in the lead-up to the country’s presidential elections this October. Uruguay, the most secular country in Latin America, also ranks highly in such categories as rule of law, confidence in government, low perceptions of corruption and crime, and so forth. Political culture and society in Uruguay are also marked by strong currents of statism, but, as Chafuen points out, subtle shifts may be starting to take place. Signs of these shifts can be seen in their presidential candidates.

In recent years we have seen surprising results in electoral contests around the world. Latin America is no exception—few predicted the victory of Jair Bolsonaro, who became the leader of Brazil, the region’s largest economy. Two of Brazil’s southern neighbors, Argentina and Uruguay, will be holding presidential elections this October 27. I will focus on Uruguay, one of only three Latin American countries that, in the World Justice Project rankings, gets a passing grade in rule of law and lack of corruption (the other two being Chile and Costa Rica).

Why pay attention to such a small nation? Small countries can not only e prosperous but can also e examples for other countries. Take Hong Kong and Singapore, ranked first and second in economic freedom and with es per capita of over $60,000 and $90,000 respectively. Uruguay is twice the size of Austria but appears pared to its much larger neighbors, Argentina and Brazil. Uruguay, however, ranks much better than its neighbors in most aspects, including e per capita.

During several periods in history, Uruguay provided avenues for freedom to beleaguered citizens beyond its borders. When Peronism returned to my native Argentina in 1973, totalitarian practices muzzled much of the media. Many of us who lived in Buenos Aires tuned into Radio Colonia (a radio station in Uruguay) for independent news reporting. When Argentina imposed all types of exchange controls, Uruguay was also the place of choice for conducting financial transactions.

Uruguay, however, is far from being a libertarian haven. I have visited this country twice this year and have been following the debates leading up to the presidential election. Observing the political gymnastics and the reactions of the people and the media as a whole it es apparent that Uruguay suffers from a very statist culture. The few candidates who want to weaken the interventionist consensus have to find different ways to dress up—some would say disguise—their anti-statist messages in acceptable terms.

Read the entire article here.

(Homepage photo credit: Uruguay’s Congressional Palace. Felipe Restrepo Acosta, Wikimedia Commons. CC BY-SA 4.0.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The Beginning and End of Christian Giving
Over at Mere Comments, and following up on this week’s Acton Commentary, “Christian Giving Begins with the Local Church,” I discuss some reasons why Christian giving doesn’t end there. It’s vitally important, I think, to distinguish between the church as institution and the church as organism. ...
Rome Reports: Experts study ways to ensure elderly healthcare
The Rome Reports news service has put together some video and text based on Acton’s Dec. 2 conference in Rome, Italy, “Ethics, Aging, and the Coming Healthcare Challenge” Acton has also created a special web page where you can download the speeches and presentations from the event. Report follows: December 12, 2010. With people living longer than ever before, this has created certain challenges for society, the Church, and medicine in general. Many questions of ethics have also arisen in...
Colson: Our Work Matters to God
In this week’s “Two Minute Warning,” Chuck Colson shows that “work is something we are all called to do, using our gifts to God’s glory.” As a special offer this week, the Colson Center is giving plimentary copies of Lester DeKoster’s little classic on this subject, Work: The Meaning of Your Life—A Christian Perspective from Christian’s Library Press. Be sure to sign up at the Colson Center website for your free copy, and order a copy or two for important...
J. S. Bach — Christmas Oratorio (Weihnachtsoratorium)
Soli Deo Gloria: “to God alone be the Glory.” J. S. Bach often wrote this (or its abbreviation “S.D.G.”) at the conclusion of his scores (secular as well as sacred). Also listen to parts two and three of this recording made at Pilgrimage Church Maria Himmelfahrt, Tading, Germany, 2005. ...
An Everyday Example of the Evil of Big Government
My favorite pair of glasses has a scratched lens (despite the much vaunted “no-scratch” coating). So, I went to Lenscrafters to get the lens replaced. They asked me when I got the prescription. It turns out it was a little over a year ago. ”I’m sorry,” the woman at Lenscrafters tells me, “but we cannot replace the lens because your prescription has expired.” Let’s review the situation. I have a scratched lens in a pair of glasses which are working...
‘Cast Away the Works of Darkness’
ALMIGHTY God, give us grace that we may cast away the works of darkness, and put upon us the armour of light, now in the time of this mortal life, in which thy Son Jesus Christ came to visit us in great humility; that in the last day, when he e again in his glorious majesty to judge both the quick and the dead, we may rise to the life immortal, through him who liveth and reigneth with thee and...
Church of Greece: Country ‘occupied’ by creditors
With the country insolvent, and streets filled with violent protests, the Church of Greece is now pointing fingers at the country’s political leadership and international “creditors” (who have just ponied up another 2.5 billion euros for the bailout). Yet Greece, the Holy Synod says, is “under occupation” by lenders, who have moved in because the politicians “undermined the real interests of the country and its people.” Here’s a report from the Athens Now site, which attributed the statement to the...
Ecumenical-Industrial Complex at Work?
I assert the existence of the plex” in my book Ecumenical Babel. On that point, this bears watching: “Ecumenical news agency suspended, editors removed.” From the piece: Earlier this year the WCC, which has been ENI’s main funder and in whose headquarters the agency was based, said it was reducing its financial support for 2011 by over 50 percent. The WCC is an umbrella body linking Protestant and Orthodox churches around the globe. An acting spokesman for the organisation told...
Empowerment through Giving within the Local Church
In a follow up to Jordan mentary last week, “Christian Giving Begins with the Local Church,” here is a related excerpt from Darren Dochuk’s From Bible Belt to Sunbelt: Plain-Folk Religion, Grassroots Politics, and the rise of Evangelical Conservatism. I will review the new book published by Norton in the next issue of Religion & Liberty and for the PowerBlog. The excerpt from Dochuk’s book is an excellent reflection of not just how the local church can fulfill their Gospel...
The WCRC and Social Justice
Rev. Daniel Meeter, pastor in the Reformed Church of America (RCA), writing in the Reformed journal Perspectives, “Observations on the World Communion of Reformed Churches”: My participation at Johannesburg is the reason I was an observer at the General Council, and why I was assigned to the General mittee on Accra (though there were many mittees and a host of workshops that interested me, from worship to theology to inter-faith dialogue). mittee was huge: sixty people or so. We eventually...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved