Trump’s pardon of ex-Honduran president Hernández injects wild card into election

Honduran presidential candidate and businessman Nasry Asfura of the opposition National Party leaves after a meeting with business leaders in Tegucigalpa on November 28, 2025. (Photo by Orlando SIERRA / AFP)
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Updated 30 November 2025
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Trump’s pardon of ex-Honduran president Hernández injects wild card into election

  • Hondurans are buzzing about US President Donald Trump’s recent involvement in their presidential election
  • Trump endorsed Nasry “Tito” Asfura from the conservative National Party and said he will pardon ex-President Juan Orlando Hernández

TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras: The day before Honduras elects a new president, suddenly the main topics of conversation here shifted from domestic matters to US President Donald Trump and the former Honduran president he said he will pardon.
Trump cannonballed into the deep end of Honduran politics this week, first endorsing presidential candidate Nasry “Tito” Asfura from the conservative National Party and then announcing the pardon of ex-President Juan Orlando Hernández — of the same party — sentenced to 45 years in a US prison for helping move tons of cocaine.
Trump’s influence
Until the US president’s splashy entrance, the main concern around the election was that the three candidates with an apparent chance to win were all undermining the process’ credibility, warning of manipulation and saying they wouldn’t recognize a preliminary result that didn’t go their way.
On Saturday, Hondurans were trying to sort out who would benefit from Trump’s actions and what exactly he was trying to do.
Wild card
The endorsement of Asfura seemed straightforward enough: one conservative backing another. But throwing in Hernández, someone whose lengthy US federal trial in a New York City courtroom was covered daily in the Honduran media, was a wild card.
It could hurt Asfura by reminding voters of the depths of the corruption of his party. Or it could help him by firing up the National Party’s base.
Trump also dismissed the other two leading candidates Rixi Moncada of the governing social democrat Libre Party and Salvador Nasralla of the Liberal Party, who he called a “borderline Communist.”
Eve of the election
Moncada, the former finance and defense secretary in the outgoing administration of President Xiomara Castro, pounced on the US president’s intervention.
Before she stepped to the podium before cheering supporters, a giant screen played video loops of Hernández’s arrest.
Moncada framed it as Honduras’ organized crime interests and the country’s handful of economically dominant families deciding in the days before the election that their candidates wouldn’t be able to beat her, so they went to Washington for help.
It was Castro who had Hernández arrested months after he left office, something Moncada said that Honduras’ powerful economic interests allowed, because he was no longer of use to them. But now, desperate, Trump was sending who she called “the biggest capo in the history of Honduras” back to try to energize conservative voters.
“What has happened yesterday (the pardon) is a new crime and that new crime we will judge tomorrow (Sunday) at the ballot box,” Moncada said to cheers. “They won’t come back.”
The night before, Nasralla tried to use Trump’s interference to bolster his own cultivated outsider status, even in his fourth bid for the presidency.
“I don’t answer to dark pacts, or corrupt networks or criminals who have killed our people,” he said Friday night.
Divisive figure
It was all giving Hondurans a lot to talk about Saturday.
At an intersection in a wealthier Tegucigalpa neighborhood, Adalid Ávila sold oranges, bananas, pineapples and rambutans from the back of a pickup truck. About 100 yards away a banner fluttered from a highway overpass with a picture of Hernández the day he was handed over to US authorities in 2022.
It warned people not to forget allegations that he had also diverted money from social security as president.
But Ávila said a lot of people still think highly of Hernández, so he didn’t think Trump’s pardon would have much effect on the election.
Endorsement of Asfura
The 21-year-old vendor said that he planned to vote for Asfura, who he remembered as Tegucigalpa’s mayor for building tunnels and bridges – including the one the banner hung from — that somewhat relieved its crushing traffic.
“He’s hardworking, he inspires you,” Ávila said. He did think that Trump’s endorsement could help Asfura, because Hondurans know how much help the US can be, he said.
Most of all, Ávila wants Honduras’ next president to be “honorable,” to work for the people and not forget the campaign promises, he said. He worried that the leading candidates won’t accept Sunday’s result.
“People aren’t tolerant in this country,” he said. “There’s always revolution, because no one likes to lose.”
Hope for peaceful vote
Melany Martínez, a 30-year-old nurse, waited in a long line Saturday morning for a “baleada,” a Honduran delicacy of beans, cheese and cream wrapped in a soft, fresh tortilla.
She called Trump’s endorsement of Asfura an “alert” to Hondurans and she wondered what the US president’s angle was.
“I think the people’s decision must be taken here, because in the end we’re the citizens,” she said. Trump’s pardoning of Hernández struck her as wrong, because he had been convicted of a crime.
She too hoped for a peaceful election with a respected result. But she had heard talk in the street about the chance of trouble and even suggestions to stock up on household essentials.
As a nurse, she wants the next president to focus on education and health, two areas that have been chronically ignored.
Oliver Erazo, a law professor at the National Autonomous University of Honduras, said that he didn’t expect Trump’s interference to have a big impact on voters’ decisions.
“The social and collective behavior of the electorate was already defined a week or two ago, especially when it comes to the National Party and the Liberal Party,” he said.


US pays about $160m of the nearly $4 billion it owes the United Nations

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US pays about $160m of the nearly $4 billion it owes the United Nations

  • The UN has said the United States owes $2.196 billion to its regular budget
  • Trump has said the United Nations has not lived up to its potential

UNITED NATIONS: The United States has paid about $160 million of the nearly $4 billion it owes the United Nations, the UN said Thursday.
The Trump administration’s payment is earmarked for the UN’s regular operating budget, UN spokesman Stéphane Dujarric told The Associated Press.
The UN has said the United States owes $2.196 billion to its regular budget, including $767 million for this year, and $1.8 billion for a separate budget for the far-flung UN peacekeeping operations.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warned last month that the world body faces “imminent financial collapse” unless its financial rules are overhauled or all 193 member nations pay their dues, a message clearly directed at the United States.
The disclosure of the payment came as President Donald Trump convened the first meeting of the Board of Peace, a new initiative many see as his attempt to rival the UN Security Council’s role in preventing and ending conflict around the world.
Trump has said the United Nations has not lived up to its potential. His administration did not pay anything to the United Nations in 2025, and it has withdrawn from UN organizations, including the World Health Organization and the cultural agency UNESCO, while pulling funding from dozens of others.
UN officials have said 95 percent of the arrears to the UN’s regular budget is from the United States.