We Need a New Observatory of Democracy in the Americas
The Organization of American States is no longer credible. We need a new body if we are to protect democracy
The Organization of American States is no longer credible. We need a new body if we are to protect democracy
A look at how the OAS, particularly Secretary General Almagro, supported the Áñez government in Bolivia.
A new human rights report clearly identifies the audit of the 2019 elections carried out by the Organization of American States as a major factor that contributed to the political crisis that led to the forced resignation of President Morales.
New statements about Bolivia’s 2019 elections from an electoral authority that was widely cited by proponents of the electoral fraud narrative are reigniting calls for an investigation into the role of the OAS.
This paper looks at the economy of Bolivia during the de facto government that took power following a military coup in November of 2019 and that ruled for one year.
When “stop the steal” becomes the rallying cry of election losers in other countries
The OAS and its leadership must be held accountable, or these crimes will keep happening.
This paper reaffirms our previous conclusions that Morales’s first-round victory was predictable based on the data available at the time of the October 21, 2019 OAS statement.
The most scathing public indictment of Almagro’s actions has come from Mexico, whose Subsecretary for Latin America and the Caribbean delivered a scathing indictment of the current General Secretary for his unilateral decision-making, support for harmful
The Organization of American States, a supposedly neutral election observer, helped legitimate last year’s coup in Bolivia by falsely claiming Evo Morales had committed election fraud. And now it’s observing today’s elections