A man votes at a polling station in Bogota on March 13, 2022 — all eyes will be on the presidential primaries happening alongside the legislative vote © AFP / Juan BARRETO
Bogota (AFP), Mar 13 – Colombians went to the polls Sunday to draw up a shortlist of candidates for presidential elections that may yield the country’s first-ever leftist leader.
Nearly 39 million of Colombia’s 50 million inhabitants are eligible to cast ballots in a complex but critical election in a country plagued by violence and growing poverty levels.
“We want citizens to come out in mass today” to vote, said outgoing President Ivan Duque. “The triumph of democracy is also a rejection of violence.”
On one part of the ballot, voters will determine the composition of the Senate and House of Representatives, currently in the hands of right-wing parties.
But all eyes will be on the presidential primaries — called inter-party “consultations” — happening alongside the legislative vote.
In a country with a history of political violence and voter turnout traditionally below 50 percent, Duque has promised safety “guarantees” for the non-compulsory vote.
It comes with the president and legislature both at rock-bottom levels of public opinion.
Colombia has always been ruled by the political right. But polls show that 61-year-old Gustavo Petro — a former guerrilla, ex-Bogota mayor and senator on the political left — stands a real chance of winning.
People check a list with ID numbers in front of a polling station as Colombians voted to draw up a shortlist of candidates for presidential elections © AFP / Juan BARRETO
Also in the running is Ingrid Betancourt, who was once held hostage by the guerrillas of the now-defunct Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). She is vying to represent centrist parties as an alternative to both the ruling right and Petro.
Sunday’s process must yield three presidential contenders from 15 candidates hoping to represent groups of politically-aligned parties — one each for the left, right and center.
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Three others have already been chosen by their respective groupings.
Six finalists will face off in a first round of presidential elections on May 29, which will be followed by a runoff on June 19 if no one wins an outright majority.
– First leftist president? –
Polls show Gustavo Petro in the lead ahead of the first round of presidential voting in Colombia on May 29 © AFP / Luis ROBAYO
Polls show Petro has the support of about 45 percent of voters — more than any other candidate in a country traditionally distrustful of the left.
That distrust is widely associated with FARC and other rebel groups that fought the government in a nearly six-decade civil conflict.
“When the government is unpopular, there is alternation and the opposition wins, but in Colombia, this is new: the left has never really been in a position to win an election,” said analyst Yann Basset of the Rosario University in Bogota.
In 2018, Petro lost the presidential race to Duque, who is leaving office as his country’s most unpopular president in history following a year marked by social unrest and a violent police crackdown that drew international condemnation.
French-Colombian Ingrid Betancourt was captured by the FARC guerrilla group in 2002 while campaigning for the presidency, and was rescued in a military operation six-and-a-half years later, in 2008 © AFP / DANIEL MUNOZ
The right he represents is divided and has no clear frontrunner.
It is also Betancourt’s second presidential run: she was abducted 20 years ago while campaigning and held captive in the jungle for more than six years.
If she goes through, her vice presidential running mate will be retired colonel Jose Luis Esparza, who rescued Betancourt from her FARC captors.
Colombian presidents serve a non-renewable four-year term.
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– Economy dominates –
Duque’s successor faces a multitude of challenges, not least of which is a new cycle of murders and kidnappings as violence has surged despite the 2016 peace deal that disarmed the FARC and officially ended the civil war.
Outgoing Colombian President Ivan Duque votes at a polling station in Bogota © AFP / Juan Pablo Pino
Despite the pact, fighters of the leftist National Liberation Army (ELN) still battle dissidents of the disbanded FARC, paramilitary forces and drug cartels for territory, resources and smuggling routes.
Colombia is the world’s largest cocaine exporter.
The new president will also have to contend with an economy hard hit by the fallout from the coronavirus pandemic.