From El Salvador to Honduras, why authoritarians gain from USAID cuts
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| San Salvador, El Salvador
On the face of it, the USAID money that Kara Wilson Garc铆a was promised last year for Project RED, her child care-focused nongovernmental organization in El Salvador, had little to do with democracy. She spends most of her time zipping between family homes and fundraising events working to strengthen the country鈥檚 child protection system.
But she was aiming to specifically serve the children of parents who are among the 87,000 arrested under President Nayib Bukele鈥檚 鈥渟tate of exception.鈥 The crackdown, which has seen homicides plummet since launching in 2022, has simultaneously left by imprisoned caregivers.
The $50,000 U.S. commitment last year to Ms. Wilson鈥檚 pilot project evaporated after the Jan. 20 announcement of a freeze on the U.S. Agency for International Development.
Why We Wrote This
USAID cuts have hurt international development work. But in Central America they鈥檙e also hampering civil society groups dedicated to preserving democracy.
Across Central America, civil society organizations like Ms. Wilson鈥檚 are cutting staff and programming, and in some cases closing their doors. It鈥檚 not simply a threat to the lives of the direct beneficiaries of services around access to water, food security, or citizen journalism. In a region overwhelmed by high homicide rates and corruption, many organizations that are losing funding are also losing key footing as the last line of defense for democratic values. As some governments in the region move away from democracy, civil society checks on their power are crumbling in real time.
And in the case of El Salvador, the U.S. decision to halt its support for NGOs abroad by cutting USAID funds may have emboldened the government to take its own extreme steps toward curtailing civil society. On May 20, El Salvador鈥檚 Legislative Assembly passed a new 鈥渇oreign agents鈥 law that imposes a 30% tax on all individuals and organizations receiving foreign funds.
The withdrawal of USAID funding 鈥渓eaves a lot of very important democracy work much more vulnerable,鈥 says Enrique Roig, former deputy assistant secretary in the U.S. State Department鈥檚 Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor. USAID has long supported organizations that promote transparency and accountability, he says, and these cuts work 鈥渢o the delight of some autocrats in the region, like Bukele, who don鈥檛 want anybody shining a light on potential issues of corruption, don鈥檛 want any criticism of their policies.鈥
Who was USAID for?
Four of seven Central American countries sit at the bottom half of the Global State of Democracy Initiative, an index of civil liberties measured in 154 nations. Nicaragua ranks 143rd, and not far behind are El Salvador (94th), Honduras (91st), and Guatemala (83rd) 鈥 all of which have witnessed recent democratic backslides.
The USAID cuts hit Central America immediately.
In Honduras, considered the , the Forest Conservation Institute lost a project . Domestic electoral observation work by churches and universities in Honduras have been suspended due to the USAID cuts as well, according to the Washington Office on Latin America, which in April conducted WOLA found 70% of local organizations had to cut staff, half reported a 鈥渟erious鈥 impact on their budget, and 25% reported a 鈥渧ery serious鈥 impact on their budget.
In El Salvador, went to projects supporting issues like improving access to clean water, halting illegal migration, and training security forces. In Guatemala, Catholic Relief Services and Save The Children have been the two biggest recipients of USAID funds over the past 25 years.
Nicaraguan journalists, exiled in Costa Rica because of the dictatorship at home, launched a crowdfunding campaign following the U.S. cuts. 鈥淲e have never had to juggle so many challenges to continue our reporting as we have in the past three months,鈥 the journalists behind the online news site Divergentes said in an op-ed published in El Pa铆s in March.
USAID supports diverse and sometimes critical services in the region. But the Trump administration has dismissed their work as that of ideological activists. 鈥淯SAID has been run by a bunch of radical lunatics and we鈥檙e getting them out,鈥 President Donald Trump announced on Feb. 3.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio turned that rhetoric into policy when he announced the cancellation of 83% of USAID programs. He said the affected contracts 鈥渟pent tens of billions of dollars in ways that did not serve, (and in some cases even harmed), the core national interests of the United States.鈥
The White House underscored specific examples of how the funds were spent inappropriately: 鈥淛ust some taken at random,鈥 President Trump said on Feb. 19, 鈥$2 million for sex change operations in Guatemala.鈥
The Guatemalan organization that received that grant tells a different story.
鈥淭he power of disinformation鈥
In September 2024, the right-wing news outlet The Daily Caller published an article under the headline 鈥淔eds Dump Millions in One Latin American Country To Fund Sex Changes, LGBT Activism.鈥 The story highlighted a $2 million grant to Asociaci贸n Lambda, an LGBTQ+ organization in Guatemala, for a project that was to be implemented from April 2024 to 2027.
The staff at Lambda saw the story and moved on, not giving it much thought. But months later on Feb. 3, when an official White House account shared聽, it sparked an onslaught of online harassment, according to Diego Lima, coordinator of the National Human Rights Observatory at Lambda.
鈥淣o doctor or specialist in Guatemala performs sex change operations,鈥 Mr. Lima says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the power of disinformation.鈥
While Lambda acted as an umbrella organization for the project, handling the financial responsibilities of the USAID grant, Trans-Fromac铆on, a transgender men鈥檚 collective, was in charge of project logistics.
The project鈥檚 objective was to provide legal advice and psychological counseling, says Mr. Lima. 鈥淭here was no hormone treatment, no surgical procedures.鈥 show only 25% of the grant was disbursed before funding was cut.
Organizations like Lambda do the work the state fails to do, using USAID money for everything from nutrition to Indigenous rights, Mr. Lima says. They 鈥渋nvested in socially excluded populations that the state doesn鈥檛 care to invest in.鈥
Due to the U.S. funding cuts, the number of people Lambda provides psychological support to through this project fell from 200 to 20. Their ability to shelter members of the LGTBQ+ community dropped by 50%.
They鈥檙e now considering grants from Asian governments, Mr. Lima says.
New threats
Mr. Bukele has stood behind the Trump administration鈥檚 cuts. He posted on X in February, 鈥淭he majority of these [USAID] funds are funneled into opposition groups, NGOs with political agendas, and destabilizing movements.鈥
He added, 鈥淐utting this so-called aid isn鈥檛 just beneficial for the United States; it鈥檚 also a big win for the rest of the world.鈥
Only 2.5% of USAID funds since 2019 went toward programs that supported media in El Salvador, according to an El Faro investigation, yet this industry was hit particularly hard. In a country roughly the size of Massachusetts, some 11 media organizations were affected by the cuts and , according to the Salvadoran Journalists鈥 Association.
On May 20, the Legislative Assembly passed a law that now requires NGOs in El Salvador to register under a newly created Foreign Agents Registry, which prohibits them from 鈥渃arrying out activities for political purposes or others that subvert public order, threaten national security, or undermine social and political stability.鈥 Any foreign funding of civil society will be taxed 30%.
Addressing legislators on May 20, the president of El Salvador鈥檚 Legislative Assembly said, 鈥淚f you want to keep paying those sellout journalists to make up cartoonish stories, keep doing it.鈥
Mr. Roig, who also served as coordinator for USAID鈥檚 Central America Regional Security Initiative, says that combined with slowing global economic growth and 鈥渁 lack of democratic governability ... the projections do not bode well鈥 for Central America鈥檚 future.