2020 Ecuadorian protests
The 2020 demonstrations in Ecuador were a series of national mobilizations carried out beginning on May 1, 2020, after the announcement of economic measures by the government of Lenín Moreno and the approval in the second debate of the Organic Law of Humanitarian Support by the National Assembly, adopted due to the serious health and economic crisis generated by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Background
October 2019 demonstrations
At the beginning of October of the previous year, the organizations of the Unitary Front of Workers, the Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities, and the Popular Front called for a national strike that led to the abandonment of the measures to eliminate the gasoline subsidy. Despite this, the government undertook other economic measures that the organizations that called the previous demonstrations did not like, such as the "Tax Simplicity and Progressivity Law".COVID-19 pandemic
The management of the COVID-19 pandemic by the Moreno government has been the worst evaluated in the Latin American region according to opinion polls. The hospital crisis that occurred in Guayaquil was news in various international media and the president of El Salvador, Nayib Bukele, exposed the situation as a bad example of pandemic management.Humanitarian Support Law and economic measures
During the time of the COVID-19 pandemic and the national quarantine, the Moreno government has carried out several national channels to announce various economic measures to mitigate the crisis caused by the pandemic.After Black Monday, on March 11, Lenín Moreno announced a package of measures that included the targeting of fuel subsidies, this after talking with the International Monetary Fund and representatives of different sectors. Days later, on the 16th, the Minister of Economy, Richard Martínez announced the payment of the debt of $324 million for the 24th of the same month, an act that he complied despite the refusal of the National Assembly. In May, Martínez admitted that paid 1,000 million to Credit Suisse and Goldman Sachs in April, declaring that it was seeking to achieve a debt restructuring, that same month a cut in the education budget was announced. On April 16, the sending of the "Organic Law of Humanitarian Support" was announced, which would be approved on May 15 by the Assembly. Rejected by social organizations as they do not consider possible agreements between employees and employers, as well as their opposition to a reduction in working hours that represents a reduction in salary. On May 19, a new package of measures eliminated public companies such as TAME, Correos del Ecuador, Ferrocarriles del Ecuador, Siembra, Real Estate, Public Media and others. Adding to this a new announcement of salary reduction and new taxes that had already been announced.