Just winning elections is not enough for the Left in Latin America

Peru shocked the world when socialist Pedro Castillo won the presidential election earlier this year. He came into office promising to fight neoliberalism.
The right wing fought back. A motion to impeach him failed today, but the fight has just begun.

although the motion looks unlikely to succeed, the opposition seems certain to launch other, similar attempts in the new year.
“It’s not whether he’ll be impeached but when,” said Denisse Rodríguez-Olivari, a Peruvian political scientist...
His administration was plagued by controversy from the start when he named a Marxist hardliner as his prime minister.

Guido Bellido lasted just 69 days. Other members of cabinet have gone — a foreign minister quit over his comments about Shining Path, the Maoist group that terrorised Peru in the 1980s and 1990s; an interior minister was axed for hosting a raucous party despite coronavirus restrictions he signed into law; and a defence minister quit in a scandal over favouritism in deciding which officers should get promoted within the armed forces. On average, Castillo has changed a minister every two weeks.

Castillo, faced with a hard-right opposition that will concede nothing, has given ground time and time again, until his own party rebelled against him.

most Perú Libre members of Congress refused to give a vote of confidence to Castillo’s new and apparently more moderate cabinet.

Another huge left-wing victory was the recent presidential election in Honduras of Xiomara Castro. However, the previous administration left the nation in such a shamble that her job will probably be even harder than Castillo's in Peru.

She has proposed a constituent assembly to rewrite the Constitution in order to make it more inclusive, and has said she wants to loosen Honduras’s draconian abortion laws. She has also suggested strengthening diplomatic relations with Beijing. Notably, she has said she will reverse the imposition of Employment and Economic Development Zones, the quasi-autonomous corporate enclaves that many Hondurans consider to be a way of selling off national sovereignty...
“One of the clearest lessons from 2009—both from the coup in Honduras and FMLN in El Salvador—is that executive power is not the same as taking power, capital P,” Goodfriend said. She explained that the Salvadoran right’s control over congress, the courts, and much of the media constrained and destabilized the FMLN. She expects Libre will face similar challenges.

“Our country has never been governed by the left,” he said. “The narrative of the elites will be to blame us for every minute error, and, above all, make the country believe that the crisis we’ve inherited is our fault.”

That is what is happening in Peru today.
But Honduras has another problem that looms even larger - the U.S.

I heard repeatedly that people hope the Castro administration will provide an opportunity for the United States to alter its relationship with the country, which many Hondurans say remains asymmetrical and exploitative. “The US continually dictates whatever goes on in this country,” said Audrey Majomar Lomas, a business owner from Tegucigalpa. “Nothing gets done without the embassy’s approval.”

Kinda puts the "meddling" thing into perspective, don't it? Castro wisely asked for the U.N.'s help.

Finally there is Chile. The Left in Chile had a huge victory in an election to re-write the neoliberal constitution.
But Chile's right is now mobilizing.

After forty years of a neoliberal constitution inherited from Augusto Pinochet’s dictatorship, the national referendum on a new constitution is finally drawing near. And many right-wingers are starting to dust off their — or their parents’ — old military paraphernalia.

Before the pandemic brought the country to a halt, there had already been violence at demonstrations in support of Pinochet’s constitution. Armed with sticks, helmets, and tailor-made shields (some even had Confederate flags), demonstrators charged not only counter-protesters, but even mere bystanders. The police stood and watched, or sometimes even actively defended them from counterattacks...
In the email, which had the picture of an AK-47 attached to it, the group condemned the university’s secular curriculum. Claiming to have twenty-two men ready for action, they warned: “We shall eradicate you, we shall cleanse Chile starting with you. Chile has changed and you will die.”

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There is behind the scenes support (likely illegal) for their right wing puppets If this fails as in the case of Venezuela and Nicaragua the results are deemed illegitimate and sanctions are sure to follow.

Without proof I can imagine that the CIA's super computer was busy depriving Castro of a super majority in the legislature to enact reforms. It was quite peculiar that the initial results showed Castro with a decisive lead only to go silent for over a week ending with a majority that is not reflective of her lead.

the darker the color the higher the result Castro is red and Asfura is blue
Castro: 40-50% 50–60% 60–70%
Asfura: 40–50%

The last choice is simply a coup as to what happened in Bolivia previously.

https://kawsachunnews.com/anez-regime-sought-weapons-from-us-and-uk-to-r...

The coup administration of Jeanine Añez wrote to the embassies of the United States and United Kingdom, making requests for military aid, presumably to “repress the Bolivian people,” according to Bolivia’s Deputy Minister of Citizen Security, Roberto Ríos, who displayed the letters before the Bolivian press.

The request for supplies was made at a time when a second coup was being prepared with the participation of foreign mercenaries, renegade police squads and vigilante mobs who sought to prevent a Luis Arce Presidency, with plans to assassinate him if necessary. This coup plot was led by former defacto Minister of Defense, Luis Fernando López Julio.

“The de facto Government, through Vice Minister Wilson Santamaría, made the request for equipment and weapons to the American embassy and the British embassy, ​​three weeks before the 2020 general elections,” Ríos denounced.

On September 25, 2020, Santamaría, outside of his legal powers, addressed a note to the British Ambassador in which he requested “pistols, cartridges, gas grenades , complete uniforms, gas masks, night goggles, thermals, binoculars, helmets, protective suits and equipment that it considers important for the Bolivian National Police in order to defend the integrity of the Bolivian people, its territory and security ”.

According to the documentation presented, in May 2020 a letter was addressed to the US diplomatic representative in Bolivia, Bruce Williamson, Charge d’Affaires, asking him to meet a request “in order to defend the integrity of the Bolivian people and their territory.”

The original letter sent to the US embassy adds that “the assignment of the equipment, description and justification of the equipment” is attached as annexes, however, the details of these additions have not yet been found in the archives of the Ministry of Government.

A bit of an update on the events in Peru.

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[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WEX8QaFmFa4]

"...the goal was for the war to simply continue forever"

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