Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Iván Cepeda's Primary Win For The Left And What It Signals For Colombia's 2026 Race


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Iván Cepeda, a veteran senator and human-rights advocate, has won the Colombian left's open primary, giving the governing coalition a clear standard-bearer for the 2026 presidential election.

With nearly all tables counted, Cepeda took roughly two-thirds of the vote-about 1.48 million-doubling former health minister Carolina Corcho.

Former Medellín mayor Daniel Quintero, who withdrew late but remained on the ballot, drew around six percent. Turnout passed two million, a solid showing for a party consultation held outside a national election day.

The result matters beyond party lines. First, it tells investors and neighbors who is likely to frame Colombia 's agenda on peace talks, social policy, and the rule of law in 2026.

Cepeda's profile-built alongside victims' organizations and peace processes-signals continuity with negotiations and a focus on rights and accountability.



Second, it serves as a live test of the left's organizing power after two years in government: mobilizing over two million Colombians suggests the coalition can still move people and logistics ahead of a demanding electoral year.
Cepeda's Primary Win Clarifies Colombia's 2026 Race
There is a story behind the story. The vote exposed capacity gaps: fewer polling tables and some venue changes frustrated supporters and may have dampened participation. The coalition must now convert a unified primary win into a broader front.

Leaders plan an inter-party consultation in March, on the day of congressional elections, to bring in parts of the center. Legal questions linger over whether late-withdrawing figures like Quintero can compete then, an issue that could shape the alliance's final ticket.

Cepeda's biography helps explain the coalition's bet. A philosopher from Bogotá, he entered Congress in 2010, became a visible face for victims of state and paramilitary violence, supported the 2016 peace accord with the FARC, and has engaged in talks with the ELN.

He is also a central figure in high-profile legal battles that have defined Colombia's polarized politics-experience that gives him name recognition but also firm opposition.

The next markers are clear: candidate lists for Congress now being finalized, the March legislative vote and consultative alliances, and then the May presidential first round.

Sunday's primary did not settle Colombia's direction, but it narrowed the contest and clarified the stakes for 2026.

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The Rio Times

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