Three alliances are being developed between Honduran political parties

Tegucigalpa, Honduras.

Political parties have only 64 days to sign total or partial alliances to participate in the general elections that will take place. on November 28 this year.

The problem is that the Law on Electoral and Political Organizations provides that these agreements be registered with the electoral authority six months before the elections and even before the convocation that will take place on May 27.

In these two months, the political forces will have to negotiate who will be the presidential candidate (a sensitive and difficult issue) and the integrated government plan, among other conditions. The current political reality indicates three scenarios of possible alliances: two from the opposition and one from the ruling party.

LEA: Judgments for securing the property of Mayor Nasry Asfura

Before the mayor, Liberal President Luis Zelaya announced that he would ally with Salvador Nasralla, president of the Salvadoran Party of Honduras (PSH).

If the National Electoral Council (CNE) declares Yani Rosenthal the winner, former President Zelaya would no longer sign the alliance on behalf of the Liberal Party, as he lost the stamps and the presidency of the Central Executive Council (CCEPL). As a result, according to experts, he will have to leave the Liberal Party to form an alliance with another party’s candidate.

The same situation will happen with the liberal Darío Banegas and with those who probably come from the Libertad y Refundación (Free) Party, including Wilfredo Méndez and Nelson Ávila. The alliance between the Liberal and Free Party factions with the PSH would be joined by the Party for Innovation and Unity (Pinu). Then it would be a PSH / Pinu alliance and possibly another emerging party.

The second scenario is likely Partial alliance between Libre and the Liberal Party if the CNE declares Rosenthal the winner, who will take control of his party. The third is the secure agreement that the National Party would have with some minority parties with which it has already negotiated at the congressional level.

.Source