Progressive forces denounce the ‘electoral coup’ in Honduras

By Martha Grevatt 
December 10, 2025

Voters in Honduras went to the polls in a national election on Nov. 30; as of this writing no candidate has yet been named president. In the midst of numerous breakdowns in the electoral system (TREP), irregularities, security issues, evidence of fraud and blatant interference by U.S. President Donald Trump, current President Xiomara Castro de Zelaya has called the elections “null.”

Supporters of the party LIBRE, Liberty and Refoundation, protest the general election results in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, Tuesday, Dec. 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)

Current vote tallies reportedly show right-wing candidate Nasty Asfura of the National Party beating the other right-wing candidate, Salvador Nasralla of the Liberal Party, by a slim margin, with Rixi Moncada of the ruling LIBRE Party trailing far behind. Yet pre-election polls either gave Moncada a slight advantage over the other two candidates or showed the three running very close. About 15% of the votes still are supposed to be recounted due to inconsistencies in the data.

President Castro stated: “We are experiencing a process marked by threats, coercion, manipulation by the TREP and alteration of the will of the people. These actions constitute an ongoing electoral coup that we will denounce. … My duty as president and as a woman who emerged from the resistance is to defend democracy. National dignity and the sovereign will of the people, that is an unbreakable mandate in our Constitution. That is why I affirm these elections, as revealed by the 26 audio recordings presented, are invalid.” (Telesur English YouTube, Dec. 10)

The reference to the “26 audio recordings” pertains to statements, made public by LIBRE representative on the National Electoral Council (CNE) Marlon Ochoa, where National Party leaders outlined plans to manipulate election results in collusion with the Honduran military.

Trump promotes National Party

LIBRE has denounced Trump’s blatant interference in the Honduran election by openly backing Asfura before the election. On Dec. 1, Trump stated on his social media platform, Truth Social:  “Looks like Honduras is trying to change the results of their Presidential Election. If they do, there will be hell to pay!”

There are reports of threats to block remittances of funds to Hondurans from family members working in the U.S.

Purportedly neutral observing bodies such as the Organization of American States and the European Union were silent on Trump’s clear violations of Honduran sovereignty and his attempts to influence the outcome of the election.

Hondurans are also furious at Trump for the pardon of former President Juan Orlando Hernández, known as JOH, who was convicted in U.S. courts in 2024 of drug trafficking charges. JOH is alleged to have been involved in the importation of 400 tons of cocaine to the U.S. and using proceeds and bribes from drug traffickers to fund his election campaign in 2013.

The pardon of JOH exposes the extreme hypocrisy of the Trump administration, which has used the phony “war on drugs” as an excuse to attack small boats in the Caribbean, murdering almost 90 people, and threatening Venezuela.

If Asfura does become president, the main beneficiaries will be foreign corporations and the Honduran oligarchy. These are the forces behind the special economic zones known as ZEDEs and the upholding of the law creating ZEDEs after Castro blocked the law in 2022. The notorious Próspera ZEDE is described as “a private, for-profit city, with its own government that courts foreign investors through low taxes and light regulation.” (nytimes.com, Aug. 28, 2024)

President Castro has called on the Honduran masses to protest the electoral process in the streets and LIBRE will hold an “Extraordinary National Assembly” on Dec. 13.

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