Honduras' Asfura takes office after razor-thin election win
- On Jan. 27, 2026, Nasry Asfura was sworn in before Congress in Tegucigalpa in an austere ceremony without many foreign dignitaries.
- A closely fought election, marked by contested counts and U.S. interference, preceded the inauguration amid a three-week wait and allegations of fraud involving Nasry Asfura and Salvador Nasralla.
- Honduran authorities reported Asfura won with 40.27% against Salvador Nasralla's 39.53%, while Nasralla disputes the result and Asfura served as Tegucigalpa mayor from 2014 to 2022.
- Asfura pledged to restore ties with Taiwan, and Washington said it aimed to begin trade talks with Honduras `as soon as possible`, giving Donald Trump another regional ally.
- Asfura will serve a four-year term until January 2030 but must gain rival parties' support, including those alleging fraud, while around two million Hondurans in the United States face uncertain migration and remittance issues.
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What We’re Watching: Honduras’ new leader takes office, Trump threatens Iran again, Winter Olympics to get ICE-y
Trump-backed tycoon takes office in HondurasConservative businessman Nasry Asfura has taken office as president of Honduras after winning a razor-thin election that his opponent still disputes. Asfura, who was endorsed by Donald Trump ahead of the vote, has pledged to shrink the state, boost investment, and crack down hard on crime in the gang-wracked Central American nation. Will he emulate the controversial but popular strongman approach of hi…
Tegucigalpa. Conservative businessman Nasry Asfura of the National Party (PN), who was supported by U.S. President Donald Trump during the campaign, yesterday assumed the presidency of Honduras for the period 2026-2030. His arrival ended four years of the left-wing government of Xiomara Castro.
In Honduras, U.S. President Trump-backed candidate Asfura has been sworn in as President.
Trump-backed businessman Nasry Asfura sworn in as president of Honduras
Trump-backed businessman Nasry Asfura was sworn in Tuesday as president of Honduras. He pledged to create jobs, crack down on crime and improve key social services like education and health care.
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