At a Washington press briefing yesterday, US State Department spokesman John Kirby said the decision to stop funding a Haitian electoral cycle that began in 2015 did not "signal a reduction in US support for the people or development of Haiti."
He framed the decision as a simple budgeting matter by the US, which is Haiti's largest donor.
He said Washington did not plan to spend additional taxpayer money for two more voting rounds in this troubled country but would "maintain assistance in other key priority areas."
Last year, US taxpayers contributed USD 33 million for a three-round Haitian electoral cycle that was intended to elect a president, parliament members and other offices.
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But the presidential runoff was repeatedly scrapped amid deep public suspicions of fraud and violent protests.
It wasn't immediately clear what the absence of US funding might mean for Haiti's revamped Provisional Electoral Council, which organizes balloting in a country where elections are never easy.
Calls to new council chief Leopold Berlanger went unanswered.
A total of 27 presidential candidates are now expected to run in the redo vote. A runoff would take place in January.
Last month, Kenneth Merten, the US State Department's special coordinator for Haiti, said the US was "disappointed" with the decision to redo the vote because impoverished Haiti could have avoided its leadership muddle if it had stuck to agreed-upon timetables earlier.
Acting President Jocelerme Privert's 120-day mandate heading an interim administration expired June 14 but the fragmented parliament is blocking a vote on extending his term or paving the way for a new interim leader.