This story was updated at 9:30 pm, Monday, August 28.
Even though an anti-corruption candidate won Guatemala鈥檚 presidential election last week in a landslide 鈥 and the country's electoral tribunal certified his victory Monday night 鈥 his establishment opponents started moving earlier in the day to challenge the results, and his party was suspended.
Still, many Guatemala experts say those efforts likely won't be enough to derail the January inauguration of Bernardo Ar茅valo 鈥 who trounced first-round winner Sandra Torres in the Aug. 20 runoff election with 58% of the vote to her 37%.
Torres and much of the conservative ruling establishment that backed her are charging vote fraud. But "I think it's too soon to say that [Ar茅valo鈥檚 victory] is doomed," said Will Freeman, Latin American studies fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York.
The country鈥檚 corrupt political establishment 鈥 known as El Pacto de Corruptos, or 'The Pact of the Corrupt' 鈥 failed to keep Ar茅valo out of the runoff in the first place, though it certainly tried to disqualify him and his left-center party after he took second place in the first round in June. That indicates the elite鈥檚 anti-democratic grip on Guatemala may be slipping, says Freeman.
鈥淲hen everyone assumed this would be an unfree and unfair election, we saw enough of the establishment fragment to prevent that from happening,鈥 he said.
鈥淭he business community in particular did not want to see it happen. Unless the establishment was all acting together, it was very hard to block the electoral process.鈥
Soon after Torres issued (with no evidence) her vote fraud allegation on Monday, though, the establishment did send another chill through Guatemala.
'
Attorney General Consuelo Porras 鈥 whom the U.S. has sanctioned for corruption 鈥 had police arrest an attorney involved in anti-corruption efforts, Claudia Gonzalez, and search the home of the parents of another, Juan Francisco Sandoval, who is currently in exile.
Because Porras is in office until 2026, Freeman says she is most likely sending Ar茅valo a warning.
鈥淭his to me looks like Consuelo Porras trying to send a message to Ar茅valo that you have to negotiate with me,鈥 Freeman said, 鈥渁nd that I鈥檒l act in ways that are dubiously legal...to defend myself and my interests.鈥
It's unclear if the electoral registry's decision to suspend Ar茅valo's Semilla, or Seed party 鈥 an action Porras' office had also sought 鈥 will affect his ability to claim the presidency.
But many Guatemala democracy watchdogs are nervous about the establishment鈥檚 chances of thwarting an Ar茅valo presidency simply because they have time: Ar茅valo isn鈥檛 scheduled to be inaugurated until January 14.
And even if he does get sworn in, Freeman points out, the establishment-controlled Congress and judiciary are poised to put up myriad bureaucratic and financial roadblocks for his administration.