Costa Rica; U.S. Revokes Visas of La Nación Executives in Costa Rica; Wave of Violence and Organized Crime; Historic Rise of Women to Power in Costa Rica.

Friday, May 8, 2026. Costa Rica Costa Rica has long projected the image of stability in Central America, a country associated with ecotourism, foreign investment, environmental leadership, and democratic continuity. Yet beneath that image, the country is entering one of the most consequential transitional periods in its modern history. This week, our focus turns toward Costa Rica as shifting political dynamics, rising security concerns, organized crime expansion, and mounting institutional tensions begin reshaping the national landscape. Once viewed almost exclusively as the “safe haven” of the region, Costa Rica now faces growing pressure from transnational criminal organizations using the country as both a logistics and export hub for narcotics trafficking. Public concern over crime and insecurity has rapidly become one of the dominant political drivers in the country. Politically, Costa Rica has entered a new phase following the February 1, 2026 national elections, where Laura Fernández Delgado, closely aligned with outgoing President Rodrigo Chaves, secured victory amid a campaign heavily centered on security, governance reform, and institutional change. The current administration’s strong anti-crime messaging and growing criticism of the judiciary have generated both domestic support and international concern regarding democratic balance and institutional independence. At the same time, Costa Rica continues to remain one of the strongest tourism and residency destinations in Latin America. Its renewable energy leadership, relatively educated workforce, strategic geographic position, and continued appeal to expatriates and investors maintain important economic advantages. Tourism remains a central pillar of the economy, while foreign residency demand continues to grow among North Americans and Europeans seeking political stability, environmental quality, and lifestyle migration opportunities. This week’s review will examine Costa Rica through multiple lenses: geopolitical positioning, election outcomes and political continuity, organized crime trends, tourism dependency, energy and infrastructure development, foreign investment climate, residency migration patterns, and the broader implications for regional business and risk advisory operations throughout Central America. Brett Mikkelson Founder, B.M. Investigations, Inc. – Private Investigations in Panama TOP NEWS and TIDBITS: Costa Rica Achieves an Unprecedented Rise of Women in Political Power Despite the Conservative Surge This May 8 will mark an unprecedented moment in the history of Costa Rica: a woman serving as President of the Legislative Assembly will swear in another woman as President of the Republic, Laura Fernández Delgado, only the second woman to govern the Central American country, which is nevertheless experiencing a conservative surge under outgoing President Rodrigo Chaves Robles. That moment will be possible because this Friday, ruling-party attorney Yara Jiménez becomes the fourth woman to assume the presidency of the Legislative Assembly. The election of the attorney, who served as Secretary of Government under Rodrigo Chaves until this month, is the result of the sufficient majority held by the Sovereign People’s Party (PPSO), which secured 31 seats in the February elections, allowing it to control numerous legislative decisions. It also reflects a historic milestone in Costa Rican politics: the highest number of female legislators in the country’s two centuries of independence. With 30 women and 27 men, the unicameral Legislative Assembly for the 2026–2030 term consolidates the trend toward greater female participation in national political life. Only countries with authoritarian regimes surpass Costa Rica in female parliamentary representation: Rwanda with 63.8%, Cuba with 57.2%, and Nicaragua with 55%, according to the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU). Women also constitute the majority within the PPSO caucus, while the main opposition party, the National Liberation Party (PLN), has only one more man than woman. The leftist Broad Front also has a female majority, along with two single-member caucuses led by women. One of them is Claudia Dobles, former First Lady during the administration of Carlos Alvarado (2018–2022). After women’s suffrage was incorporated into the Constitution in the mid-20th century and three women were elected in 1953 — and only one in 1962 — Costa Rica gradually took steps to reduce gender gaps in positions of power. In 1986, the male-dominated Legislative Assembly, influenced by President Óscar Arias Sánchez, elected the first woman to preside over the legislature, Rose Marie Karpinsky. In the following 40 years, only two more women reached that position, although female representation steadily increased due to equality initiatives and legislation requiring political parties to maintain gender parity in candidate lists. This is how 2026 arrived to mark the milestone highlighted by Eugenia Zamora, President of the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE), during her speech delivering credentials to the newly elected legislators. “It will be the first legislative body in our history composed mostly of women, the consequence not of chance or spontaneous circumstances, but of decades of struggle for a more democratic and more equal society.” Zamora herself became the first woman to lead the electoral authority in 2021. What some sectors celebrate as an achievement is not necessarily viewed the same way by the ruling movement that embodies this increased female representation. This has been explicitly stated by Pilar Cisneros, head of the ruling-party caucus during the Chaves administration, and in some ways echoed by Fernández herself. She rejected the feminine form of the title and chose to be called “president” rather than “presidenta,” as she will be sworn in on May 8. The 39-year-old political scientist takes power as a close ally of Chaves following elections widely viewed as a plebiscite on the 2022–2026 administration, with stronger support among men and older voters. “Inclusive language is associated with progressivism and is therefore targeted by this conservative sector,” explained María José Cascante, a political scientist and researcher at the University of Costa Rica specializing in gender issues. “It is not superficial; it is part of the cultural battle and something that touches deep sensitivities.” Cascante celebrates the rise in female representation as the result of affirmative policies, international commitments, and domestic activist pressure, while also warning of the strong presence of a conservative movement whose discourse explicitly rejects so-called “gender ideology,” a pejorative phrase commonly used by religious and allied groups. That sector is now part of the ruling coalition, as demonstrated by new meetings between Chaves and Fernández
