rbtfl.
Costa Rica elects hardliner Laura Fernández in a first-round security landslide

Costa Rica elects hardliner Laura Fernández in a first-round security landslide

A Chaves-aligned conservative wins outright with 48.5% and a single-party legislative majority — the first since 1990

Leaders· transition कौन तय करता है·जीवन कैसे बदलता है ·9 takes ·अद्यतन 24 जून 2026

Summary

Costa Rica elected Laura Fernández Delgado of the Sovereign People's Party (PPSO) president on 1 February 2026, taking 48.53% and clearing the 40% single-round threshold against Álvaro Ramos Chaves (PLN) and 18 others (कौन तय करता है). She is the country's second woman president and takes office 8 May as its 50th. The PPSO also won an Assembly majority — 31 of the seats, against PLN's 17 — the first single-party majority since 1990. Public security drove the campaign: Fernández ran hard-line amid a sharp rise in homicides tied to cocaine trafficking and organised crime (जीवन कैसे बदलता है). Turnout was 69.22%, up 9.25 points on 2022. The result institutionalises the populist project of outgoing president Rodrigo Chaves.

By the numbers

  • 48.53% — Fernández's first-round share, above the 40% win threshold.
  • 31 of seats — PPSO's Legislative Assembly majority, first single-party majority since 1990.
  • 69.22% — turnout, up 9.25 points on the 2022 first round.
  • 8 May 2026 — date Fernández takes office as 50th president.
  • 2nd — woman to be elected president of Costa Rica.

Why it matters

A hard-line security mandate plus a rare one-party legislative majority concentrates power in a historically consensual democracy, in a Central American state once seen as a stability anchor now strained by trafficking violence. It signals the regional drift toward security-first populism.

What to watch

  • The 8 May handover and Fernández's first security and judicial moves.
  • How a single-party majority reshapes Costa Rica's institutional checks.
  • Homicide and trafficking trends against the hard-line platform.