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By Stephen Johnson
Since September 11, 2001, America’s support for electoral reforms, free trade, and security in Latin America has been supplanted by the global war on terrorism and liberating Iraq. Time is running short for governments that are ill-equipped to deal with expanding populations, crime, and globalization. Seeing little change in their daily lives as a result of half-implemented reforms, voters in Latin America’s poorest countries are choosing populist authoritarian leaders who think confronting the United States is the solution to lagging prosperity. If economies falter, the exodus of migrants will rise, transnational crime will spike, and markets for U.S. exports will shrink.|
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