Colombia's Ex-President Uribe Defies Criminal Conviction To Seek Senate Return
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) (Analysis) Former Colombian president Álvaro Uribe announced his return to politics despite becoming the country's first ex-president to face criminal conviction.
The Centro Democrático party confirmed Uribe will occupy position 25 on their Senate candidate list for March 2026 elections, strategically placed to maximize electoral impact while navigating unprecedented legal challenges.
Uribe received a 12-year house arrest sentence on July 31, 2025, for bribery and procedural fraud. The case stems from allegations he manipulated witnesses to counter claims about paramilitary connections.
However, Bogotá's Superior Tribunal granted him freedom in August while his appeal proceeds, allowing his political comeback. The 73-year-old former president remains Colombia's most polarizing political figure.
He governed from 2002 to 2010 during the height of the FARC guerrilla conflict, implementing hardline security policies that earned him approval ratings near 80 percent.
His influence shaped three subsequent presidencies, making him the defining political force of 21st-century Colombia. In 2018, Uribe achieved a historic milestone by becoming the most voted senator in Colombian history with 870,000 individual votes.
This record demonstrates his enduring electoral power despite current legal troubles. His strategic placement at position 25 reflects Centro Democrático's plan to secure all targeted Senate seats through his vote-pulling ability.
Colombia's electoral system allows parties to present closed lists where voters choose parties rather than individual candidates. This mechanism enables Uribe to benefit the entire Centro Democrático slate while protecting against potential judicial disqualifications.
The party currently holds 13 Senate seats, down from 19 in 2018, and aims to expand to 25 seats. The political landscape has shifted dramatically since President Gustavo Petro became Colombia 's first leftist leader in 2022.
The governing Pacto Histórico coalition won 20 Senate seats in 2022, becoming the largest bloc and highlighting the traditional right's decline. Recent polling shows Centro Democrático commanding just 10 percent support compared to Pacto Histórico's 17 percent.
Uribe has framed his legal troubles as political persecution, calling Petro's administration a "neo-communist dictatorship consolidation process."
This narrative resonated with supporters who organized nationwide marches in August 2025 defending Uribe and Colombian democracy. The persecution theme has become a central mobilizing tool for the fragmented right-wing opposition.
The assassination of Miguel Uribe Turbay, a rising Centro Democrático presidential candidate who died in August after being shot at a political rally, has intensified Colombia's political crisis.
His death recalled the darkest periods of political violence when multiple presidential candidates were murdered. Before his assassination, polls showed Miguel Uribe leading presidential voting intentions at 13.7 percent.
Colombia's 2026 elections occur amid unprecedented polarization and institutional stress. President Petro faces disapproval ratings reaching 64 percent, while economic concerns and security deterioration dominate voter priorities.
The campaign timeline begins with legislative elections on March 8, 2026, followed by the presidential first round on May 31.
The Centro Democrático party confirmed Uribe will occupy position 25 on their Senate candidate list for March 2026 elections, strategically placed to maximize electoral impact while navigating unprecedented legal challenges.
Uribe received a 12-year house arrest sentence on July 31, 2025, for bribery and procedural fraud. The case stems from allegations he manipulated witnesses to counter claims about paramilitary connections.
However, Bogotá's Superior Tribunal granted him freedom in August while his appeal proceeds, allowing his political comeback. The 73-year-old former president remains Colombia's most polarizing political figure.
He governed from 2002 to 2010 during the height of the FARC guerrilla conflict, implementing hardline security policies that earned him approval ratings near 80 percent.
His influence shaped three subsequent presidencies, making him the defining political force of 21st-century Colombia. In 2018, Uribe achieved a historic milestone by becoming the most voted senator in Colombian history with 870,000 individual votes.
This record demonstrates his enduring electoral power despite current legal troubles. His strategic placement at position 25 reflects Centro Democrático's plan to secure all targeted Senate seats through his vote-pulling ability.
Colombia's electoral system allows parties to present closed lists where voters choose parties rather than individual candidates. This mechanism enables Uribe to benefit the entire Centro Democrático slate while protecting against potential judicial disqualifications.
The party currently holds 13 Senate seats, down from 19 in 2018, and aims to expand to 25 seats. The political landscape has shifted dramatically since President Gustavo Petro became Colombia 's first leftist leader in 2022.
The governing Pacto Histórico coalition won 20 Senate seats in 2022, becoming the largest bloc and highlighting the traditional right's decline. Recent polling shows Centro Democrático commanding just 10 percent support compared to Pacto Histórico's 17 percent.
Uribe has framed his legal troubles as political persecution, calling Petro's administration a "neo-communist dictatorship consolidation process."
This narrative resonated with supporters who organized nationwide marches in August 2025 defending Uribe and Colombian democracy. The persecution theme has become a central mobilizing tool for the fragmented right-wing opposition.
The assassination of Miguel Uribe Turbay, a rising Centro Democrático presidential candidate who died in August after being shot at a political rally, has intensified Colombia's political crisis.
His death recalled the darkest periods of political violence when multiple presidential candidates were murdered. Before his assassination, polls showed Miguel Uribe leading presidential voting intentions at 13.7 percent.
Colombia's 2026 elections occur amid unprecedented polarization and institutional stress. President Petro faces disapproval ratings reaching 64 percent, while economic concerns and security deterioration dominate voter priorities.
The campaign timeline begins with legislative elections on March 8, 2026, followed by the presidential first round on May 31.

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