Colorado
In Paraguay, calls for change test Colorado Party’s political machine
ASUNCION, March 28 (Reuters) – Paraguay’s ruling Colorado Get together – a conservative political machine that has dominated authorities in Asuncion for some eight many years – could possibly be dealing with a serious problem on the poll field subsequent month.
Voters say they need change and are fed up with inner social gathering squabbles and allegations of graft – opening up the door for a broad opposition alliance to win energy.
The only-round election on April 30 will select the president, legislators, and regional governors.
Opinion polls recommend the presidential contest will likely be an in depth battle between Colorado social gathering economist Santiago Pena and lawyer Efrain Alegre from the opposition Concertacion Nacional, sitting effectively forward of a giant however fragmented area of opponents.
At stake are Paraguay’s lengthy diplomatic ties with Taiwan. Alegre has pledged to sever them in an effort to open up the nation’s main soy and beef export sectors to China.
Alegre has additionally promised to chop vitality payments, launch extra social welfare applications, and push judicial reforms. Pena, in the meantime, is pledging “employment reforms” to create extra jobs and to toughen a combat on crime and medicines.
Since one-party rule within the Fifties, the Colorados have ruled with out interruption, apart from Fernando Lugo’s truncated 2008-2012 presidency that led to impeachment.
Many citizens say they really feel it’s time for one thing new.
“I would like there to be change, I not want to see the Colorados controlling every little thing,” mentioned Karina Galindo, a 50-year-old graphic designer in capital Asuncion.
“All of the phrases they are saying within the marketing campaign are empty for me as a result of they promise something.”
Pena might also be impacted by a U.S.-led graft probe into Horacio Cartes, a former Colorado president who led the nation from 2013 to 2018. Cartes, who denies the accusations, nonetheless runs the social gathering and is Pena’s predominant backer.
Amongst different inner divisions, present President Mario Abdo Benitez has given solely lukewarm help to Pena, saying he isn’t the most effective candidate.
In the meantime, Alegre’s opposition social gathering has accomplished extra to enhance its enchantment since a slender defeat on the final election in 2018, mentioned Marcos Perez Talia, a political science researcher on the College of Valencia.
“Now the Concertacion is a broader area for folks coming collectively and there’s extra probability it can flip the vote,” he mentioned.
Nonetheless, the Colorado social gathering retains a robust election marketing campaign machine and supporter base that goes again generations. That might edge the end in its favor, mentioned Marcello Lachi, a Paraguay-based political scientist.
Adelina Caceres, director of a public faculty within the city of Guarambare, on the outskirts of the capital, mentioned she supported the Colorado social gathering primarily as a result of “her grandfather had been Colorado,” and regardless of being usually annoyed by them.
“I’m all the time knocking on the doorways of politicians to request assist for the college… However we obtain little or no from the Colorados,” she mentioned.
Polls present Paraguayans are targeted on jobs, safety and corruption, and it could be the as but undecided voters whose ballots will tip the steadiness on who takes energy on Aug. 15.
“I feel each events are fairly terrible,” mentioned Lorena Ruiz, a 45-year-old accountant. “I will see earlier than the elections who is a bit more satisfactory to obtain my vote.”
Reporting by Daniela Desantis; Modifying by Adam Jourdan and Rosalba O’Brien
Our Requirements: The Thomson Reuters Belief Rules.
Colorado
Colorado funeral home owners plead guilty to corpse abuse after nearly 200 bodies found decomposing
The owners of a Colorado funeral home accused of piling hundreds of bodies in room-temperature conditions inside a dilapidated building and giving loved ones concrete instead of ashes have pleaded guilty to corpse abuse.
Jon and Carie Hallford, who own the Return to Nature Funeral Home in Colorado Springs, Colorado, pleaded guilty to 191 counts of abuse of a corpse on Friday.
“The bodies were [lying] on the ground, stacked on shelves, left on gurneys, stacked on top of each other or just piled in rooms,” prosecutor Rachael Powell said in court.
Their loved ones are “intensely and forever outraged,” she added. Some of the families were in the courtroom when they pleaded guilty.
MIXED-UP REMAINS, ROTTING BODIES, FAKE ASHES: HOW GRIEVING FAMILIES UNCOVERED THESE 5 FUNERAL HOME HORRORS
Crystina Page, whose son died in 2019, said outside the courtroom on Friday: “He laid in the corner of an inoperable fridge, dumped out of his body bag with rats and maggots eating his face for four years. Now every moment that I think of my son, I’m having to think of Jon and Carie, and that’s not going away.”
The Hallfords also faced charges of theft, money laundering and forgery, which were dismissed with their plea deals.
The couple spent $882,300 in COVID relief funds on things like vacations, cosmetic surgery, car and tuition for their child.
Jon Hallford could serve 20 years in prison under the plea deal and Carie Hallford could serve 15 to 20 years.
Six people who objected to the plea deals, calling their recommended sentences insufficient, will get a chance to speak before they’re sentenced in April.
MOURNING LOVED ONES TARGETED BY ‘DESPICABLE’ FUNERAL HOME SCAM
If the judge rejects the plea deal, the case may still go to trial.
The Hallfords already pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud in October in connection with their misuse of funds.
The accusations go back to 2019 and the improperly stored bodies were discovered after neighbors reported a stench coming from the building.
Authorities in hazmat gear found bodies stacked on top of each other, some so decayed they couldn’t be identified, and the place was infested with bugs.
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Following the gruesome discovery, Colorado has tightened funeral home regulations.
Fox News Digital’s Greg Wehner and the Associated Press contributed to this report.
Colorado
Colorado weather: Temperatures above normal Friday before snow returns
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Colorado
Law enforcement investigate possible
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