The Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Mexico, Panama, Uruguay, and—probably—Venezuela will pick presidents while Latinos will help decide the U.S. outcome.
News & Analysis
Check support levels for Andrés Manuel López Obrador during his final year in office.
Two women, Claudia Sheinbaum and Xóchitl Gálvez, are competing for the presidency. See polls ahead of the June 2, 2024 election.
AS/COA covers 2024's elections in the Americas, from presidential to municipal votes.
With an eye to the June 2 elections, keep up to date on the race for president, legislature, governorships, and more.
Sponsored: PepsiCo is turning to nature-based solutions to regenerate agriculture, but we need public and private partners to unlock their full potential.
With a goal of eliminating some ministries, Argentina’s new president has picked a smaller-than-usual team to help him carry out his agenda.
"Social media has indelibly changed politics in Latin America," writes AS/COA's Chase Harrison for World Politics Review about the new trend in the region.
"The fundamental issue is political survival, not conquest," writes AS/COA's Eric Farnsworth in The Spectator about the Venezuelan leader's recent actions.
On December 17, Chileans vote on a new constitutional draft. Learn about its contents and see polling.
More than 20,000 posts—presidency included—are up for grabs on June 2, 2024. AS/COA Online maps out key dates, voters, and the seats at stake.
AS/COA Online covers the expansion of abortion decriminalization in Latin America in the twenty-first century.
In a rebuke to the status quo, Milei takes office in December with plans to downsize the state. We look at runoff results and what he’ll face in Congress.
Learn about how the candidates differ when it comes to economic policy, endorsements, and coalitions.
Amid the conflict, learn about the region's ties with Israel and Palestine in terms of the diaspora, diplomacy, security, and more.
Chilean, Colombian, Mexican, and Peruvian leaders are among those in attendance at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation meeting in San Francisco.
See how the competition between Sergio Massa and Javier Milei is shaping up ahead of the November 19 runoff election.
"Companies have both the incentives and paths" to propel women into leadership positions, write Susan Segal and Carin Zissis in El Universal.
"Las empresas tienen tanto los incentivos como los caminos" para impulsar a las mujeres al liderazgo, escriben Susan Segal y Carin Zissis en El Universal.
AS/COA covered votes in the Americas, from presidential elections to referendums.