“I am the new president-elect of Honduras,” Nasralla, 64, wrote on Twitter after the results were announced.
Nasralla, who helms the Opposition Alliance Against the Dictatorship, had 45.17 percent of the vote, while the National Party’s Juan Orlando Hernandez, the incumbent, had 40.21 percent, according to the country’s election tribunal.
A victory for Nasralla would be a blow for the United States, which sees Hernandez as a reliable ally in tackling drug trafficking, gangs and migration.
The United States has longstanding military ties to Honduras and few ideological allies among the current crop of Central American presidents.
The attempt by Hernandez to clinch a second term was divisive in the poor Central American country. Honduras is still trying to overcome the after effects of a 2009 coup that arose after former President Manuel Zelaya, an ally of late Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez, proposed a referendum on lifting term limits.
Zelaya was at Nasralla’s side on Monday morning. As coordinator and, many believe, the true power in the Alliance, Zelaya would be a major beneficiary if Nasralla wins.
Zelaya was ditched amid fears he was plotting to adopt socialist policies in Honduras, a country where a conservative business class wields enormous power. The United States wrestled with how to handle the coup, and Zelaya remains a bogeyman for US officials and many of Honduras’elite.
“We won,” Zelaya wrote on Twitter.
Polls, including one released after voting ended on Sunday, had shown Hernandez likely to easily win a second term, made possible by a contentious 2015 decision by the Supreme Court.
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