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An Aymara indigenous woman casts her vote during presidential elections in La Paz, on Oct. 20, 2019.JORGE BERNAL/AFP/Getty Images

Polls closed in Bolivia on Sunday after a calm election as President Evo Morales sought an unprecedented fourth term in what was regarded as the tightest race of his political career.

The 59-year-old leftist, who has been in office for nearly 14 years, was favoured to win the first-round vote. But polls suggested South America’s longest-serving leader would likely be forced into a December runoff in which he could be vulnerable to a united opposition.

Voting, which was mandatory, was mostly calm, although police said they arrested more than 100 people for violating the country’s rigid election-day rules against drinking, large gatherings or casual driving.

Mr. Morales voted early and said he remained confident of the results. Polls closed at 4 p.m. and early quick counts were expected Sunday night.

Mr. Morales came to prominence leading social protests and won election as Bolivia’s first Indigenous president in 2006.

The President, a former leader of a coca-growers union, allied himself with a leftist bloc of Latin American leaders and used revenues from the Andean country’s natural gas and minerals to redistribute wealth among the masses and lift millions out of poverty in the region’s poorest country. The economy has grown by an annual average of about 4.5 per cent, well above the regional average.

Mr. Morales, the son of Aymara Indian shepherds, has also been credited for battling racial inequalities.

Many Bolivians, such as vendor Celestino Aguirre still identify with “Evo,” as he’s widely known, saying people shouldn’t criticize him so much. “It’s not against Evo, it’s against me, against the poor people, against the humble.”

But Mr. Morales also has faced growing dissatisfaction even among his Indigenous supporters. Some are frustrated by corruption scandals linked to his administration – although not Mr. Morales himself – and many by his refusal to accept a referendum on limiting presidential terms. While Bolivians voted to maintain term limits in 2016, the country’s top court, which is seen by critics as friendly to the President, ruled that limits would violate Mr. Morales’s political rights as a citizen.

“I’m thinking of a real change because I think that Evo Morales has done what he had to do and should leave by the front door,” said Nicolas Choque, a car washer.

Mauricio Parra, who administers a building in downtown La Paz, said he voted for Mr. Morales in 2006 as a reaction against previous centre-right governments.

“He did very well those four years. … [But] in his second term, there were problems of corruption, drug trafficking, nepotism and other strange things,” Mr. Parra said, saying that led him to vote against repealing term limits in the 2016 referendum. “He hasn’t respected that. That is the principle reason that I’m not going to vote for Evo Morales.”

Mr. Parra said he was backing Mr. Morales’s closest rival, former president Carlos Mesa, a 66-year-old journalist and historian who as vice-president rose to the country’s top post when his predecessor resigned in 2003 amid widespread protests. He then stepped aside himself in 2005 amid renewed demonstrations led by Mr. Morales, who was then leader of the coca-growers union.

An Oct. 4-6 poll by San Andres Higher University and other institutions said Mr. Morales led Mr. Mesa 32 per cent to 27 per cent heading into the first round of voting, with the rest split among other candidates.

But to win outright, Mr. Morales needed to get 50 per cent plus one vote or finish with 40 per cent of the votes and be 10 percentage points ahead of the nearest challenger. Without that happening, the top two finishers would go to a runoff, and the poll indicated Mr. Morales and Mr. Mesa were practically tied at just under 36 per cent each in a two-way race.

The rest of those surveyed said they were undecided, would cast a null ballot or declined to state a preference. The poll surveyed 14,420 people and the margin of error was three percentage points.

Bolivians were also electing all 166 congressional seats. Polls projected that no party would have a majority in Congress, which could lead to an impasse for the upcoming administration.

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