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As Leftists Wreak Chaos in the U.S., Latin America Shifts to the Right

Former President Donald Trump stands outside the White House with a companion, both preparing to enter a black SUV, under a clear sky.

Former President Donald Trump stands outside the White House with a companion, both preparing to enter a black SUV, under a clear sky.
President Donald Trump and Nayib Bukele, President of El Salvador, the man who broke gang rule in his country by locking up gang members in the terrorism detention center. Photo courtesy of the Trump White House.

It has been a turbulent year for Latin America, and what is emerging is a clear ideological realignment. A conservative “blue tide,” the right-leaning counterpart to the earlier leftist “pink tide,” is sweeping across the region, driven by voter frustration over rising crime, mass migration, and stagnant or declining economies. Public patience with socialism has eroded as security conditions worsen and economic promises fail to materialize, a trend reinforced by the collapse of Venezuela and the mass exodus it triggered.

That failure has reshaped political fears across the region, making left-wing authoritarianism a more immediate concern than memories of past military dictatorships. As a result, regional reactions to the U.S. snatching of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro were divided, reflecting this broader political realignment. Voters are increasingly focused on personal safety, employment, and basic economic stability rather than ideological promises.

Earlier waves of left-wing governance were sustained by a commodity boom that enabled heavy social spending, but growth slowed once that boom ended. A later resurgence of left-wing leaders followed mass protests and anti-incumbent voting but quickly faltered amid inflation, weak growth, and governance failures. Since the Covid-19 pandemic, criminal violence and economic insecurity have intensified across the region, reinforcing support for leaders promising order and economic reform.

Current right-wing leaders differ widely in ideology and governing style, sharing little beyond opposition to socialist agendas and skepticism toward international human rights institutions. Their prominence rests largely on dramatic crime policies or aggressive economic reforms, many of which are tied to specific national conditions. Whether this political shift endures depends on whether these governments can deliver measurable improvements in safety, living standards, and public services rather than relying on rhetoric or spectacle.

By early 2026, the political map of Latin America had shifted noticeably to the right. Costa Rica elected Laura Fernández in a landslide on February 1, 2026, running on a tough-on-crime platform inspired by El Salvador’s security model. Chile followed with a decisive victory for José Antonio Kast in December 2025, marking the country’s sharpest rightward turn since the Pinochet era. Honduras inaugurated Nasry Asfura in January 2026 after a narrow November win, bringing a pro-market, U.S.-aligned businessman back to power.

The shift extended into South America. In Bolivia, Rodrigo Paz Pereira won the October 2025 runoff, ending nearly two decades of rule by the socialist MAS party.

Argentina’s Javier Milei, elected in 2023, solidified his anarcho-capitalist movement with a landslide midterm victory in October 2025, strengthening his governing mandate. He launched a sweeping “shock therapy” overhaul of Argentina’s economy by cutting the number of government ministries in half, eliminating tens of thousands of public-sector jobs, and removing hundreds of state regulations.

His administration achieved Argentina’s first budget surplus in more than a decade and reduced monthly inflation from 25 percent to under 3 percent by early 2026. Milei also passed the landmark “Ley Bases” reform package, incentivizing large-scale foreign investment and shifting the country toward a free-market model.

Ecuador’s Daniel Noboa consolidated power by winning a second term in April 2025, continuing his iron-fist campaign against narco-gangs and organized crime.

El Salvador’s Nayib Bukele dismantled the country’s gang networks through a massive, multi-phase security campaign known as the Territorial Control Plan and a nationwide “state of exception.” His strategy led to the arrest of more than 85,000 people and a historic 95 percent drop in homicides, making El Salvador one of the safest countries in the Americas.

He also built the region’s largest mega-prison to house detainees and made El Salvador the first country to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender. Bukele remains the ideological reference point for this new conservative wave, with his security-first governance model and sustained popularity reshaping political messaging across the region, from Central America to the Southern Cone.

Together, these victories suggest that Latin America is undergoing a broader political correction, one that favors order, security, and market-oriented policies after years of leftist experimentation.

Three pivotal elections in 2026 could determine whether the region’s rightward momentum extends into its largest economies, potentially leaving Mexico as the last major leftist-led state in Latin America. In Peru, where elections are scheduled for April 2026, early polling shows right-wing candidates such as Lima Mayor Rafael López Aliaga and Keiko Fujimori leading the pack, with left-wing candidates trailing significantly.

In Colombia’s May 2026 contest, conservative forces are mounting a strong challenge to the current leftist administration, and voters are increasingly favoring law-and-order candidates amid persistent rural insecurity, guerrilla violence, and narcotics trafficking. The most consequential contest will take place in Brazil in October 2026, where President Lula remains competitive but faces a fractured yet energized right-wing opposition, and many are watching to see if a candidate endorsed by former President Jair Bolsonaro can unify conservative voters and reclaim the presidency.

Unlike the “Institutional Right” of the 2010s, this new wave (often called the New Right) is more populist, unapologetic about its ideology, and frequently models itself after the security tactics of Nayib Bukele or the economic shock therapy of Javier Milei.

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