- Police probe abuse of Havertz's wife after Arsenal star's woes
- Drake files defamation suit against Universal over Kendrick Lamar track
- Qatar PM says Gaza truce, hostage release deal agreed
- US firms concerned about Trump tariff, immigration plans: Fed
- Yellen warns against extending Trump's first-term US tax cuts
- Biden hails Gaza deal, says worked with Trump
- US Supreme Court weighs Texas age-check for porn sites
- Brad Pitt isn't messaging you, rep warns, after adoring fan scammed
- Trump's Energy Dept pick wants to develop renewables... and fossil fuels
- Cuba starts freeing prisoners after US terror list deal
- Fire-wrecked Los Angeles waits for winds to drop
- Prince William makes pub visit to meet fellow Aston Villa fans
- Mediators announce Gaza truce, but Israel says some points 'uresolved'
- Van Dijk laughs off talk of Liverpool wobble after more dropped points
- Rubio vows to confront 'dangerous' China, deter Taiwan invasion
- Man City's Premier League title defence is over: Foden
- Society centred around women in UK during Iron Age: scientists
- UK government bans 'zombie drug' xylazine
- Israel, Hamas agree deal for Gaza truce, hostage release: source briefed on talks
- Kosovo raids Serbia-linked offices as tense elections loom
- Social media star Maher says rugby union must do more to grow game
- Upping defence spending 'key point' for NATO summit: ministers
- Russian inflation climbs as Ukraine offensive weighs on economy
- South Africa's Nortje ruled out of Champions Trophy
- US bans controversial red food dye, decades after scientists raised alarm
- Rubio says China cheated its way to power, rejects 'liberal world order'
- US bank profits rise as Wall Street hopes for merger boom
- Methane leaks from Nord Stream pipeline blasts revised up: studies
- Humanity has opened 'Pandora's box of ills,' UN chief warns
- US tightens controls on advanced chips to curb flow to China
- Death toll at illegal S.African mine reaches 78
- Nigeria atheist defiant after leaving jail in high-profile blasphemy case
- Humanity has opened 'Pandora's box of ills:' UN chief
- US bans red food dye over possible cancer risk: health authorities
- US consumer inflation rises December but underlying pressures ease
- McIlroy and Rahm set for top-level meeting in Dubai
- Stock markets get boost from bank earnings, inflation data
- TikTok plans total US shutdown as ban deadline looms: report
- Ghana to probe former president's huge cathedral project
- Easterby sticks by Six Nations-winning veterans in first Irish squad
- Scotland recall Jonny Gray for Six Nations
- UN rights chief says transitional justice 'crucial' in Syria
- US consumer inflation rises to 2.9 percent in December
- Germany's Thiaw to miss Juve and Champions League clashes with hamstring injury: AC Milan
- France name Jegou, Auradou in Six Nations squad
- Lategan back on top as Roma hands Ford first Dakar stage win in 10 years
- Mozambique's new president vows 'unity' as sworn in amid deadly protests
- Russia PM meets Vietnam president, seeking deeper ties
- 'New blood is coming': Mensik dumps Ruud out of Australian Open
- Syria sex abuse survivors need aid, says Nobel winner Mukwege
Rodrigo Chaves leaves scandal behind in fast track to presidency
Right-wing conservative Rodrigo Chaves entered politics like a racing car.
At high speed he dodged accusations of sexual harassment and stormed straight to his goal: the Costa Rica presidency.
Leading the brand new Social Democratic Progress Party, Chaves was a relative unknown to many.
His only previous political experience was a six-month stint as finance minister between 2019 and 2020 in the outgoing administration.
But his confrontational attitude and promises to tackle the economy under the slogan "I'm up for the fight" helped him negotiate a congested field of 25 candidates in February's first round.
Although he finished a distant second to former president Jose Maria Figueres in that, by polling day for Sunday's second-round run-off, Chaves was leading voter intentions.
"We're going to win ... We've climbed the mountain, without resources, with the media against us, with insults and disgraces. But you said 'we're up for the fight' for our country," the 60-year-old called out to 250 supporters as he ended his campaign.
An economist with a 30-year career at the World Bank, Chaves jumped to the head of the opinion polls as soon as he made the second round.
Voters seemed more interested in his economics background than his shameful behavior.
"We have more than 25 years of constant economic and moral crisis and we hope that Don Rodrigo will manage to help us in this really difficult situation," said Rolando Gutierrez, 58, an automotive technician.
With a degree in economics from the University of Ohio, Chaves has vowed to pick the country up off its knees.
Known as a beacon of political stability, Costa Rica has been plunged into an economic crisis partly by the coronavirus pandemic that lashed its vital tourism sector.
- Improper conduct -
It was at the World Bank that the 1.85-meter tall Chaves, whose opponents accuse him of arrogance, became embroiled in a scandal.
He was accused of improper conduct towards two young subordinates between 2008 and 2013.
The sexual harassment charge earned him a demotion in October 2019 to a position with no responsibilities and no prospects of a salary rise for three years.
He resigned around a month later, and took on the role of finance minister in Carlos Alvarado's government.
In defense of his conduct, Chaves insisted it had been merely "jokes" that were "misinterpreted due to cultural differences."
"I have a wife, six sisters, eight aunts and two daughters -- I have a deep respect for all women," Chaves told AFP in February, ahead of the first round of voting.
Even so, last month the Wall Street Journal accused Chaves of continuing his improper behavior in a World Bank post in Indonesia between 2018 and 2019.
It also said he was denied a position in Brazil because the institution's employees there refused to work with him due to his reputation.
His troubles don't stop there. Chaves been accused of paying for campaign expenses from bank accounts that have not been declared officially, something he denies.
"We're worried that when someone like that takes power it will normalize even more so harassment and violence against women" by his supporters, said Rocio Jimenez, a member of the Women to the Fore collective.
W.Lapointe--BTB