With about a fifth of ballots counted in the six-candidate presidential race, Ortega had more than 71 per cent of the votes, the president of the Supreme Electoral Council, Roberto Rivas, said yesterday.
Ortega ran with his wife, Rosario Murillo, as his vice presidential candidate in a race that pitted him against five lesser-known candidates after court rulings weakened the opposition.
Critics of the government said the election was unfairly tilted against the opposition, but Murillo praised the process. Emerging with her husband after casting their ballots shortly before the polls closed, she called the vote "an exemplary, historic election."
Rivas also said 65 per cent of Nicaragua's 3.8 million registered voters participated in the election. The opposition, which had urged people to boycott the vote, disputed that, contending turnout was low. The main opposition movement, the Broad Front for Democracy, estimated "more than 70 per cent" of voters did not cast ballots.
Ortega and his leftist Sandinista National Liberation Front have benefited from the Central American country's steady economic growth and low levels of violence compared to neighboring Honduras and El Salvador.
Many Nicaraguans also cite the first lady's social programs as a major reason for the governing party's popularity.
"I don't think it's worth voting and wasting time, because it's already fixed," Glenda Bendana, an appliance sales executive in a Managua shopping mall, said. "Here they have taken away not our right to vote, but to choose. Ortega wants to die in power and leave his wife to take his place."
In July, Nicaragua's Supreme Electoral Council effectively decimated the opposition by ousting almost all its members from congress 28 active and alternate legislators from the Liberal Independent Party and the allied Sandinista Renovation Movement for refusing to recognize Pedro Reyes as their leader.
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