Months Pass, But Protests Remain in Bolivia

Protests in Bolivia continue to grow in the face of economic uncertainty and rising costs. These rising costs are hitting Bolivia from all sides, both internally and externally, with an unpopular government failing to solve the problem. Furthermore, this current unrest fits into a larger global pattern of uprisings against a governmental system they feel does not work for them.
Months Pass, But Protests Remain in Bolivia

June 21, 2026 05:21 EDT
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JUNE 21, 2026

Aliyah Omar, Casey Hermann, Alexandros Ouzounis and Roberta Campani

Assistant Editors, Communications and Outreach
Dear FO° Reader,
Bolivia’s recent round of protests stem from years of civil unrest toward local politics and declining economic performance. Since 2022, the country has faced ongoing economic turmoil, largely the result of collapsing natural industries and resource shortages.

Since our last newsletter on Bolivia in October 2025, the South American country saw growing discontent and frustration amid the changing administrations. Bolivia’s election in November 2025 ousted the Movement Toward Socialism (MAS) party in favor of the conservative-centrist opposition candidate Rodrigo Paz Pereira to address concerns of the country’s economic crisis. 

Support for the new administration came from Indigenous groups, farmers and the working class during the campaign. Some people from those groups are now dissatisfied with the Bolivian president for creating policies that benefit private sector investment, ignoring their desire for representation in the government and developing land reform laws. Additionally, Bolivia’s fuel shortage continued in the first months of Pereira’s governance despite his success in bringing down inflation, stoking tensions further.


La Paz, Protests in 2023, via Shutterstock
 
Protests have escalated since early May 2026 as Bolivians set up roadblocks in La Paz — the country’s administrative center. Bolivia lost $2.8 billion during the two months of barricaded streets according to the National Chamber of Industries, disrupting the flow of hospital supplies, food and fuel. The cost of goods increased, businesses have closed and some workers are on forced leave. Citizens are seeing their finances affected and some unions are outlining demands to the Pereira administration while others, like the teachers and factory workers’ unions, have signed labor agreements with the government. Reports suggest leaders of trade unions are targets in this conflict as they are kidnapped off the streets and imprisoned. To some this signals a darkened future of contention between rights groups and the government.

Sources:

Global Protest Tracker | Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

Bolivian Blockades Start to Recede After 46 Days of Unrest | Bloomberg

Who Will Rule Bolivia | Jacobin

Maybe, like you said, the property’s doing it

Economic pressures are also being acutely felt in the agricultural sectors. New land reform legislation was passed with the intent to allow farmers to use their land as collateral to try and help boost their purchasing power in tough economic times. However, critics have said that this bill is only going to help farming conglomerates and banks buy up farming land, and in some cases, outright seize properties.

Furthermore, the law’s opponents are also worried about the potential ecological damage this could cause, on top of encroaching on indigenous lands. This resulted in a month-long march from several organizations, ending in a ten-day demonstration in the capital that ultimately forced lawmakers to repeal the act. However, the inequalities that the bill was trying to solve still remain.

The country is still living in the wake of the end of fuel subsidies in December 2025. These subsidies were politically popular, as they kept fuel prices low, but cost the state millions. With their end, fuel prices doubled instantaneously. This kicked off a wave of protests and political vitriol against Paz despite the government’s attempts to soften the blow with a minimum wage increase and other stimuli. Paz was ultimately able to come to an agreement with protesting unions, but the anger clearly remained.

A law to help Bolivian farmers may actually increase land grabbing, critics warn | MONGABAY

Indigenous Organization Forces Repeal Of Land Privatization Law In Bolivia | Counter Currents

Rodrigo Paz’s Defiant First 90 Days | Americas Quarterly

Bolivia government reaches deal to end fuel protests | UPI.com

The Bolivian Workers’ Central as a central player

The Bolivian Workers’ Central (COB) union has proven to be a decisive player in the civil unrest currently taking place across Bolivia. Founded in 1952 after a revolution that overthrew Bolivia’s oligarchic class, the organization united miners, factory workers and peasants, and continues to remain a considerable force in Bolivian politics. Under the Paz presidency, this trade union, according to the Chilean left-wing online newspaper El Ciudadaño, has recently had five of its members “unlawfully abducted” amid the protests going on in the country. 

Evo Morales, the former president of Bolivia, along with his supporters, has also been accused of inciting the recent wave of protests by Paz’s government. Previously, in 2019, Morales was also accused of fomenting unrest in the country. However, as of May 2026, Morales is reported to be in hiding in the mountains of Bolivia following the electoral defeat of his MAS party. 

Recently, the executive secretary of the COB, Mario Argollo, reported that the union sent a document with an eight-point agenda to President Rodrigo Paz’s government which it urged to be addressed immediately. One of their demands was for the Attorney General, Rober Mariaca, to stop any criminalization or prosecution of protesters. 

Sources:

Bolivia In Turmoil | El Ciudadano

The Bolivian Workers’ Central sends President Paz’s government an eight-point agenda to try to pacify the country | Demócrata

What do Bolivia’s escalating protests reveal about the country’s political crisis | ACLED

Bolivia crisis: Morales accused of terrorism and sedition | BBC

What Bolivia tells us about the world

Bolivia is a case study. In 2025, more than 70 countries, from Africa to Latin America to Europe, experienced some form of popular unrest driven by shared grievances of poor governance, economic inequality and political exclusion. The movement has not subsided. Many of the protests that began in 2025 have continued into 2026, while new mobilizations have emerged with different yet related grievances. 

What connects La Paz to Geneva, Tirana to London is not ideology but numbers, the widening gap of inequalities and the increasing awareness thereof. The causes are inherently geography-agnostic: lack of employment opportunities, discriminatory practices, rising inequality and faltering economic justice. The primary concern is the widening distance between what an economy produces and who actually receives it.

What Bolivia adds to this picture — and what is largely absent from European coverage of the protests — is the colonial dimension. For nearly two decades, Bolivia was a rare experiment in indigenous political inclusion at the highest level of the state. That experiment is now being dismantled through austerity, IMF loans and a cabinet of white upper-middle-class appointees, backed by Washington. In Bolivia, Rodrigo Paz won with 55% of the vote on a moderate centrist platform; within six months, indigenous and working-class voters who carried him to office were being tear-gassed and labelled narco-terrorists by his US-backed administration. The pattern — electoral promise, structural betrayal, criminalization of dissent — is not unique to the Andes.

Bloomberg’s 2025 unrest risk model flags Ethiopia, the Central African Republic, Angola, Guatemala, the Republic of Congo and Malaysia as countries at heightened risk of civil unrest in 2026. Many of the demonstrations around the world have originated as protests against austerity policies and seemingly small-bore economic measures — raising transit fees, imposing fuel price hikes, removing subsidies. But what is being protested, in La Paz as in Geneva, is not just economic policies but a wider system. This system has decided, with remarkable consistency across governments of different parties and different continents, that the cost of crises should be borne by those who demand change.

Sources:

US says it is ramping up emergency assistance in Bolivia amid protests | Reuters 

G7 Summit Highlights Global Economic System “Captured” by Billionaires: Oxfam | Democracy Now!

Gen-Z Revolts Against ‘Dystopian Future’ as Protests Sweep the Globe

Global Protest Contagion and the Crisis of Inclusive Growth

Oxfam’s Global Inequality Report

Ending Impunity and Inequality | Oxfam International

G7 energy billionaires pocket $300 million a day since start of unlawful US and Israel war against Iran | Oxfam International

Global Protest Tracker | Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

Corruption, Overreach, and Hardship: The Global Drivers of Protests in 2025 | Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

Corruption, Overreach, and Hardship: The Global Drivers of Protests in 2025 | Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

The 2025 Surge in Global Protests Is Continuing in 2026 – European Democracy Hub


Aliyah, Casey, Alexandros and Roberta
Assistant Editors, Communications and Outreach
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