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Colombia: Left-Wing Favourite Petro to Battle Conservative Hernández in Run-Off Election

A divided Colombia heads to the polls once again next month as they choose between two highly polarising candidates.

May 31, 2022
Colombia: Left-Wing Favourite Petro to Battle Conservative Hernández in Run-Off Election
With neither side winning 50% votes, Colombia is now headed towards a run off election between the Leftist leader Gustavo Petro and Centrist candidate Rodolfo Hernández.
IMAGE SOURCE: NEW YORK TIMES

Colombia will hold a run-off election between leftist Historical Pact leader Gustavo Petro and the independent centrist-conservative candidate Rodolfo Hernández on June 19, after the pair emerged as the top two candidates in the first round of voting.

As things stand, Colombia appears to be headed towards electing its first leftist head of state, given that Petro secured 40.3% of the votes in the first round, compared to Hernández’s 28.2%. If Petro is elected, he would bring with him the country’s first Afro-Colombian vice president, his running mate Francia Márquez.

The election results mark a decisive shift in voter sentiment. Daniela Cuellar, a senior consultant at FTI Consulting in Bogotá claims, “[The] Colombian population being tired of the traditional political class.”

With rising poverty, inequality, and insecurity, all of which have been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, the country witnessed widespread civilian protests against outgoing right-wing President Iván Duque last year.

Last May, Colombia saw deadly protests that saw dozens killed and hundreds injured and arrested after Duque announced a new tax hike despite a contracting economy and rising unemployment and poverty. Although Duque eventually rescinded the move after protests resulted in water, food, and gasoline shortages, citizens remain frustrated.

Petro, who was the runner-up in the 2018 presidential election, is a former member of the M-19 guerilla movement. He has batted for radical economic and social change to deal with an economy ravaged by corruption and inflation, with one of his campaign slogans calling on Colombians to “join the change.”

The 62 year old senator has vowed to create a “multicolor democracy.” Furthermore, he has pledged to raise taxes on unproductive lands and halt oil and coal projects in the country, which he regards as “poisons comparable to cocaine.”

He has also promised low-cost loans to support small businesses, free public university education, redistribution of pensions, an anti narcotics policy, and improved focus on dealing with climate change, all of which have garnered him popular support.

He also plans to distance Colombia from its deep alliance with the United States, which became even closer under the Duque administration. The US has plans to invest $5 billion in Colombia between 2021 and 2023 and has even joint air force drills with the country. These engagements form part of US’ Western Strategic Framework, which seeks to counter the rising influence of China in the region.

The former Mayor has also expressed support for the 2016 peace deal with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) rebels, which ended a decades-long civil war, and has also committed to actively engaging in peace talks with the still-active National Liberation Army (ELN) rebels.

Meanwhile, businessman-turned-politician Rodolfo Hernández presents himself as an “anti-establishment outsider.” A self-proclaimed “king of Tik-Tok,” Hernández has leveraged his social media popularity to campaign for the polls. He has vowed to fight corruption and curtail privileges for the elite, as he believes that “citizens have a firm will to end corruption as a system of governance.

He has, however, evoked controversy over his statements expressing admiration for Adolf Hitler, which he has since called a “slip of tongue.” He has also been criticised for his misogynistic and xenophobic treatment of female Venezuelan migrants and for his stated desire to eliminate departments working on women’s affairs.

His victory has come as a surprise to many, as opinion polls had earlier predicted that Petro would face off against conservative former Mayor Fico Gutiérrez. With 23% of the votes, Gutiérrez has pushed his supporters to vote for Hernández.

Hernández has denounced Petro’s candidature, stating that it “does not suit Colombia.” Calling on his supporters to “defend democracy,” he has said Petro’s victory would be “a threat to democracy, to freedoms, to the economy.”

Despite stating otherwise, Hernández is the preferred candidate of the elites, who are firmly against voting in a leftist candidate. In fact, Fernando Posada, a political scientist, has said the Colombian elite “prefer a government that offers them nothing as long as it is not Petro.”

In this polarized environment, voting on Sunday was conducted during one of the most periods in Colombia’s modern history. Over 20 countries expressed concern over a “growing threat of violence, assassination, and interference.” Historical Pact leaders claim to have received death threats while Hernández alleges that he is under “illegal surveillance.”

Nevertheless, polling closed on late Sunday with no reported incidents of violence or unrest.