Meanwhile in the South, Bolivia's president-elect Evo Morales has been forced to resign due to pressure from military and OAS's claims of electoral fraud*, instead the second right-wing VP of the senate
Jeanine Biez has become the designated president. Morales's story more or less mirrors Lula, except instead of constitutional changes for the working poor, Morales was focused on
more traditionally nationalistic changes for Indigenous Peoples of Bolivia, who are the majority in Bolivia.
This constitutional coup itself is organized not just by right, but also major indigenous communities and large unions, nonetheless emboldened far right has already started burning indigenous offices. This is because though Morales has lifted countless people out of poverty, he has done by focusing on the fossil fuel exports of Bolivia, which are heavily dependent on US support and allowance by neighboring states, as Bolivia is a land-locked country. Similarly, the economy failed to develop actual industries, much like Venezuela, despite keeping up the interests of US capital (unlike Venezuela) which would satisfy the empowered but unemployed middle-class.
Morales himself has been offered asylum by AMLO, though it is known that many Mexican authorities were involved in ousting him.
*
Which largely seems fictitious, regardless of what you think about Morales's authoritarian tendencies.