LIVE | Colombia Presidential Runoff: Final hours of voting
Abelardo de la Espriella, a hard-line right-wing candidate, and Ivan Cepeda, an ally of Colombiaโs first left-wing government, face off in the presidential election's second round on Sunday. Their due
Abelardo de la Espriella, a hard-line right-wing candidate, and Ivan Cepeda, an ally of Colombiaโs first left-wing government, face off in the preside
Read Full Story at France 24 โWhy This Matters
This runoff encapsulates Colombiaโs deepening ideological divide, pitting a return to hardline security policies against the consolidation of the countryโs leftist turn. The outcome will shape the trajectory of Gustavo Petroโs "Total Peace" agenda, testing whether Colombiaโs first left-wing government can deliver on its promises or be hamstrung by institutional resistance. Beyond domestic policy, the result will signal to Latin Americaโs polarized electorate which political modelโpopulist conservatism or progressive transformationโremains dominant in the regionโs fourth-largest economy.
Background Context
The election follows a fractured first round where Petro narrowly led but failed to secure an outright majority, forcing a runoff against a prosecutor-turned-candidate whose rhetoric echoes the anti-establishment fervor seen in neighboring countries like Brazil. The campaign has exposed lingering scars from Colombiaโs half-century conflict, with both candidates framing their visions as existential: one as a bulwark against crime, the other as a corrective to historical inequality. Critically, this is the first presidential contest since the 2016 peace accord with the FARC, making the vote a referendum on both the dealโs legacy and the stateโs ability to govern post-conflict territories.
What Happens Next
If de la Espriella wins, his hardline approach could reignite militarized policies in rural areas while complicating Petroโs social reforms, potentially triggering capital flight and credit rating downgrades. A Cepeda victory would embolden Petroโs coalition but risk legislative gridlock with a conservative Congress, forcing a bruising battle over tax reforms and land restitution. The wildcard remains turnoutโlow participation in runoff elections has historically distorted results, raising the stakes for mobilization efforts in marginalized communities where Petroโs base is strongest.
Bigger Picture
This election is a microcosm of a broader regional shift where progressive governments face pushback from resurgent conservative movements, but with a uniquely Colombian twist: the ghost of Pablo Escobar looms over the hardline candidateโs security proposals, while his opponent must navigate the contradictions of a peace process that delivered demobilization but not prosperity. The vote also highlights how Colombiaโs urban-rural divide has replaced the traditional left-right axis, with coastal regions and indigenous communities emerging as decisive battlegrounds in what may redefine the countryโs political

