Bolivia's constituent assembly looks like splitting in two or dissolving
altogether after a dialogue process set up by the government to try and resolve
the impasse over the capital issue broke down. On 6 November the Comité
Interinstitucional de Chuquisaca, which has been lobbying for the assembly to
discuss Sucre replacing La Paz as the administrative capital, rejected the final
offer of a multi-party congressional commission. The compromise deal involved
awarding Sucre a streamlined congress, composed of nine Senators and 18 deputies
and presided over by the Vice-President. The Comité dismissed it on the grounds
that it would only have met in Sucre for 20 to 30 sessions a year while congress
was in recess.
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