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2021 Honduran general election


General elections were held in Honduras on 28 November 2021. Among the positions being contested was the President of Honduras, head of state and head of government of Honduras, to replace Juan Orlando Hernández from the National Party. Also up for election were the 128 deputies of the National Congress, 20 deputies to the Central American Parliament, 298 mayors and 298 vice mayors, as well as 2,092 council members.

Following the election, Nasry Asfura of the National Party and Xiomara Castro of Libre both declared victory as votes were being counted. On 30 November 2021, Asfura and the National Party conceded to Castro. Castro's win made her the first female president-elect of Honduras, the person with the most votes obtained in the history of Honduras, and ended 12 years of conservative National Party rule. She also became the first President elected from a party other than the National Party, Liberal Party, or their predecessors.

Incumbent president Juan Orlando Hernández was first elected in 2013 after defeating Xiomara Castro, and re-elected in 2017 after orchestrating an amendment to Constitution of Honduras to allow for his reelection. There were large protests against Hernandez following the 2017 elections, which the OAS stated contained numerous irregularities.

The President of Honduras is elected by plurality, with the candidate receiving the most votes in a single round of voting declared the winner.

The 128 members of the National Congress are elected by open list proportional representation from 18 multi-member constituencies based on the departments ranging in size from one to 23 seats. Seats are allocated using the Hare quota. Each voter can cast as many votes as the number of seats to be filled in the district. Votes are cast for individual candidates.

Party primaries were held on 14 March 2021 to elect which candidates would represent each party.

MovementsCandidatesVotesTotalMap
Unity and HopeNasry Asfura681,701 (70.12%)Valid votes: 972,139Invalid votes: 86,369Blank Votes: 108,791Total: 1,167,299(46.53%)Nasry Asfura 80%-90%      Nasry Asfura 70%-80%      Nasry Asfura 60%-70%      Nasry Asfura 50%-60%      Mauricio Oliva 50%-60%
Together We CanMauricio Oliva290,438 (29.88%)
Yanista MovementYani Rosenthal339,001 (49.97%)Valid votes: 678,370Invalid votes: 41,460Blank Votes: 58,867Total: 778,697(31.04%)Yani Rosenthal 70%-80%      Yani Rosenthal 60%-70%      Yani Rosenthal 50%-60%      Yani Rosenthal 40%-50%      Luis Zelaya 60%-70%      Luis Zelaya 50%-60%      Luis Zelaya 30%-40%      Dario Banegas 30%-40%
Recover HondurasLuis Zelaya230,242 (33.94%)
The Hope of HondurasDarío Banegas109,127 (16.09%)
Somos+Xiomara Castro404,238 (79.08%)Valid votes: 511,201Invalid votes: 26,123Blank Votes: 25,106Total: 562,430 (22.43%)Xiomara Castro >90%      Xiomara Castro 80%-90%      Xiomara Castro 70%-80%      Xiomara Castro 60%-70%
M-28 Power for You
Popular Refoundation Force FRP
People Organized in Resistance POR
Free People
AAAMEL
5 July MovementNelson Ávila58,995 (11.54%)
Nueva CorrienteCarlos Eduardo Reina25,368 (4.96%)
Free HondurasWilfredo Méndez22,600 (4.42%)
Source: National Electoral Council

Nasry Asfura is the current mayor of Honduras's capital, Tegucigalpa, and a member of the ruling right-wing National Party of Honduras. During the campaign, Asfura distanced himself from former President Juan Orlando Hernandez's alleged involvement within drug trafficking schemes engaged by his brother. Asfura is known by his supporters as "Papi a la orden" or "Daddy at your service."

Asfura prioritized upgrades to infrastructure and job creation. In addition, Asfura pledged support towards the business, health, education, and manufacturing sectors.

Xiomara Castro, the First Lady of Honduras from 2006 to 2009, was the presidential candidate for the left-wing Liberty and Refoundation (Libre) party in the 2013 general election, finishing in second place. She founded the party with her husband Manuel Zelaya after he was deposed in the 2009 Honduran coup d'état.

Her thirty-point campaign platform includes a referendum on a new constitution, the establishment of diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China, the creation of a UN-backed anti-corruption commission modeled on the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG) and advancing women's rights. On economic issues, she opposes the ZEDES semi-autonomous free trade zones promoted by Juan Orlando Hernández and supports social programs to fight poverty while maintaining good relations with the private sector. She also proposes the reform of the Security, Defense, Coalition, and Secrecy Laws.

Yani Rosenthal is a longtime member of the centrist Liberal Party of Honduras. He is a businessman and was sentenced to three years in a US prison for laundering drug money, being released in 2020 just in time to begin his presidential campaign.

  • Milton Benítez, independent candidate who withdrew to support Xiomara Castro
  • Salvador Nasralla, a candidate in 2013 and 2017, was planning to run as the candidate of the Savior Party of Honduras, but withdrew from the election on 13 October to become Castro's running mate.
  • Santos Rodriguez Orellana, independent candidate who was arrested under drug trafficking and homicide charges.
Column 1Column 2
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PollsterDateSample sizeNasry AsfuraXiomara CastroSalvador NasrallaYani RosenthalOtherUndecided/abstention
2021 election28 November 202136.450.610.03.0
LeVoteExit-Poll35.150.512.02.4
TResearch22–25 November 20211,00028.242.94.02.922.1
Paradigma14–26 October 20213,46327.725.76.6238
CESPAD14–20 October 20211,72621383533
Nasralla withdrew on 13 October 2021
Paradigma30 September 20213,35522.718.710.15.52.740.3
CID-Gallup10 September 20211,28821181813228
TResearch8–9 September 20211,00030.931.815.89.32.29.9
Paradigma11–26 August 20214,44615.013.87.54.80.658.5
Paradigma28 June–13 July 20213,00312.412.97.16.11.360.2
CESPAD13 April–7 May 20211,88814.911.77.96.67.651.1
Primary elections held on 14 March 2021
C&E Research2 March 202160014.213.815.514.142.4

Both Asfura and Castro declared victory on election night as votes continued to be counted. On 30 November 2021, Asfura's National Party conceded defeat to Castro. Asfura announced in a statement that he met with Castro and her family to congratulate her win.

Castro's victory marked the end of 12 years of National Party control of the presidency, following the constitutional crisis and the subsequent coup d'état that ousted Castro's husband in 2009. Castro is the first female president of Honduras.

CandidatePartyVotes%
Xiomara CastroLiberty and Refoundation1,716,79351.12
Nasry AsfuraNational Party1,240,26036.93
Yani RosenthalLiberal Party335,76210.00
Milton BenítezHumane Honduras8,8570.26
Carlos Mauricio PortilloChristian Democratic Party7,1030.21
Romeo Vásquez VelásquezHonduran Patriotic Alliance6,5560.20
Kelin Pérez GómezBroad Front6,0530.18
Esdras Amado LópezNew Route Party5,9110.18
Alexander MiraSavior Party of Honduras–PINU-SD5,7110.17
Marlon EscotoWe are all Honduras5,3820.16
Alfonso Díaz NarváezDemocratic Unification Party5,0810.15
Julio Lopéz CasacaAnti-Corruption Party4,1810.12
José Coto GarcíaGo-Solidary Movement3,7680.11
Lempira Cuauhtemoc VianaDemocratic Liberation Party3,3610.10
Santos Orlando Rodriguez OrellanaIndependent Movement Dignity and Hope3,2740.10
Total3,358,053100.00
3,358,05393.79
142,4953.98
79,9792.23
3,580,527100.00
5,182,42569.09
Source: CNE
Liberty and Refoundation12,758,08040.2250+20
National Party9,572,36330.1744–17
Savior Party of Honduras4,035,97012.7210New
Liberal Party3,531,88411.1322–5
Innovation and Unity Party335,2361.060–4
Christian Democratic Party305,3580.9610
Anti-Corruption Party272,6710.8610
Honduran Patriotic Alliance224,9400.710–4
Democratic Unification Party154,6010.490–1
Go-Solidary Movement147,9110.470New
New Route Party114,8890.360New
We are all Honduras111,8220.3500
Democratic Liberation Party90,2090.280New
Broad Front67,7360.2100
Total31,723,670100.001280
5,167,105
Source: CNE
Liberty and Refoundation10
National Party8
Liberal Party2
Total20
Source: CNE
PartyVotes%Seats
National Party1,101,59932.96946143–31
Liberty and Refoundation966,86928.9345650+19
Liberal Party872,55826.1161591+2
Democratic Unification–National alliance157,8424.7240
Savior Party of Honduras53,4801.60111New
Liberal–Libre alliance43,8401.31427
Christian Democratic Party129,1383.86173+2
Honduran Patriotic Alliance101
Innovation and Unity Party81+1
We are all Honduras81New
Anti-Corruption Party30–1
Go-Solidary Movement50–1
Democratic Unification Party30
New Route Party00New
Democratic Liberation Party40New
The Front00New
Independents16,4960.49141–1
Total3,341,822100.00214629924
Source: La Prensa, CNE, CNE
  • Organization of American States: the head of the Electoral Observation Mission of the OAS, Luis Guillermo Solís, remarked the responsibility with which Hondurans voted in an "atmosphere of peace and civility" and that the three majority political forces of the country contributed to celebrate "a peaceful election day". Even so, he regretted that an agreement was not reached to reform the electoral law and that the deficiencies detected must be improved.

  • Canada: The Government of Canada congratulated Castro for being the first woman President-elect. Canada states that they are looking forward to work with Castro on several priorities, particularly democracy, inclusivity, abortion, and reducing corruption.

  • Nicaragua: The President of Nicaragua Daniel Ortega and his Vice President Rosario Murillo congratulated among the first the candidate Xiomara Castro through an official statement published on 29 November 2021, stating: "Dear Xiomara, Dear Brothers: We salute with much respect and appreciation the progress towards the electoral triumph in Dear Honduras, where that Brother People lives the hope of better times. ... In our closeness and good neighborhood, we continue determined to advance creating the future.".

  • Spain: The Government of Spain congratulated Xiomara Castro on her victory, which is "symbolising the achievements in the struggle for the equality of Honduran women". He also praised Castro's message of "reconciliation, peace and justice" in her victory speech and the Honduran people for a "smooth" election.

  • United States: United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken congratulated Castro on her win following Asfura's concession. In a statement, he expressed congratulations to Castro for becoming the first female president of Honduras.

  • Venezuela: President Nicolás Maduro expressed through Twitter his congratulations to Castro for her "historic victory".

  • David Chávez, President of the National Party of Honduras announced that the party will contribute to a constructive opposition and that they were ready to work with the new government.

A few months after the election and the end of Hernández's term, it was revealed that on 1 July 2021, Hernández had his visa revoked by the U.S. Department of State, due to involvements in corruption and in the illegal drug trade. On 14 February 2022, he was surrounded by the national police and DEA agents at his home in Tegucigalpa, after the U.S. government had requested his extradition for his involvement with narcotics. On 15 February 2022, he agreed to surrender to US authorities, and on 21 April, Hernández was extradited to the United States. On 8 March 2024, Hernández was convicted of three counts of drug trafficking and weapons conspiracy, the mandatory minimum sentence for which is 40 years in prison.

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