No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeTopicsPoliticsIf you're still undecided, Sunday's presidential debate probably didn't help

If you’re still undecided, Sunday’s presidential debate probably didn’t help

With several presidential debates already behind us and one more to go before Feb. 2 elections, voters might be getting a little winded with the same five candidates reiterating their positions on various issues and displaying general contempt for each other.

Sunday’s debate on TV’s Channel 7, while at times lively, probably didn’t help undecided voters much. Sure, there were the usual barbs about Broad Front Party candidate José María Villalta being a commie without an experienced team and Liberation’s Johnny Araya representing the corrupt status quo, Unity’s Rodolfo Piza’s incessant yelling, and Citizen Action Party’s (PAC) Luis Guillermo Solís’ playing referee-analyst. But if you don’t know for whom to vote by now, it’s likely you may end up deciding in the voting booth.

The 2.5-hour debate focused on some pretty important central issues: Costa Rica’s massive fiscal deficit, poverty and unemployment, and tax policy, among them. And all candidates agreed these are pressing problems the next administration must face head-on. But their proposed solutions somehow seemed to get lost in all the bickering, and comments that should’ve become memorable sound bites petered out as the time clock expired.

“These elections are the most important in the last decade,” declared Araya, the former San José mayor of the ruling National Liberation Party. Voters must choose among candidates of the extreme left and right, he said, who could “threaten social peace” and “provoke chaos.”

Pretty powerful stuff, except Araya’s “camino seguro” mantra lost its punch when he wasn’t able to answer a previous question by PAC’s Solís about why as mayor of the nation’s capital for more than two decades, he had earned a higher salary than the mayors of Madrid and Paris. “I’m not a man of words, but of action,” the former mayor responded.

Araya, who interrupted the other candidates throughout the night, also fell short with his Lloyd Bentsen moment, telling Villalta not to compare himself with José Figueres Ferrer and “other great figures” – a tough sell from a candidate who’s current president has the worst approval ratings in the Western Hemisphere.

And while all five leading candidates agreed it would be imperative for the next administration to achieve national consensus on pressing issues like the deficit, inequality and crumbling infrastructure, there was little indication that would be possible, judging by Sunday night’s brabble. At one point, Araya and the Libertarian Movement Party’s Otto Guevara descended into arguing and finger-pointing regarding who had the most criminal investigations launched against him, complete with documents that no one in the viewing audience could see.

In his closing statement, perhaps Piza had the best advice: “Ignore polls, … choose values. … Who can lead this country best?”

If you’re not yet sure, fear not, there’s another debate next Sunday.

Trending Now

When Therians Arrive in Costa Rica

This past month I learned a new word: Therian. The first time I heard it used was by our outgoing president, Rodrigo Chaves, who...

Costa Rica Closed 2025 with 98.6 Percent Renewable Electricity Generation

Costa Rica generated 98.6 percent of its electricity from renewable sources in 2025, marking a strong rebound from the previous year's challenges. The Instituto...

Nations Revive Plastic Treaty Hopes After Tokyo Talks Signal Progress

Delegates from key nations wrapped up three days of informal discussions in Tokyo on Tuesday, describing the sessions as constructive steps toward reviving a...

Motorcycles Account for the Majority of Road Deaths in Costa Rica

Motorcycles continue to take the heaviest toll on Costa Rica's roads. In January and February this year, 63 people died while riding motorcycles. Those...

Venezuela Reports 475% Inflation as Reforms Begin

Venezuelan inflation soared to 475 percent in 2025, the highest in the world, driven by a tightening of US sanctions in the lead up...

UN Documents Killings, Disappearances and Torture by Honduras Security Forces in 2025

Honduras security forces committed serious human rights abuses in 2025 while the country operated under a state of exception, the United Nations human rights...
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica