Nicaragua's good times help Ortega shrug off 'autocrat' jibes

By Enrique Pretel

LA LIBERTAD, Nicaragua, Nov 4 (Reuters) - Ten years ago, less than a third of voters in President Daniel Ortega's mining hometown backed him, but his support has since surged here and nationally, setting him up to win a third consecutive term this week despite criticism he is autocratic.

When he ran for a second term in 2011, the Sandinista leader won handily in La Libertad, as the small mining town embraced his dramatic shift from Marxist guerilla to a pro-business champion who has brought solid economic growth to Nicaragua, Latin America's second-poorest country.

Now, aged 70, La Libertad's native son looks certain to win an election on Sunday, lauded by voters who enjoy some of the lowest crime levels in Central America and appear unfazed by opposition warnings that Ortega's tight grip on the levers of power mark a slide toward despotism.

A poll published by M&R Consultants on Tuesday showed 69.8 percent of those surveyed planned to vote for Ortega and his leftist Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) party, compared with 8.1 percent for right-wing opposition candidate Maximino Rodriguez.

In 2006, Ortega barely convinced voters that the return of a Cold War icon who boasted close ties to Venezuela, Russia and Iran - after more than a decade out of power - would not mark a renewal of spiraling inflation and instability.

Instead, helped by exports, foreign investment and multi-lateral loans, Nicaragua's GDP per capita has gone from $1,245 the year of Ortega's election to $2,087 in 2015, a rise of more than 67 percent, according to World Bank data.

"He built roads and houses here and made a lot of progress. He loves the people," said Marlon Laguna, a 57-year-old butcher proudly displaying photos of a young Ortega. "Since he got into power, things have been better in Nicaragua."

Others fear Ortega's sway over the courts, police and armed forces will make it hard to change governments when the country tires of him. The United States and the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights criticize Ortega's government for not accepting international election observers.

After elevating relatives to key government posts and changing the constitution to remove presidential term limits, he is accused by rivals of installing a dynasty, much like the 43-year rein of the Somoza family Ortega helped topple in 1979.

The growing role of Rosario Murillo, the first lady, communications tsar and now Ortega's running mate, has proved particularly divisive.

"Somoza's greatest student is Ortega," said Oscar Rene Vargas, a former ally and adviser to Ortega. "Ortega is a smart man and will give congressional seats to various parties so it appears there is no dictatorship - just like Somoza did."