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Colombia's Broad-Left Experiment: Cepeda Rides High As Moderates Push Back
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Colombia's next presidential race is already under way, and it turns on a quiet but crucial battle inside the governing camp.
The key question is whether more moderate figures can tame and reshape the ambitious project launched by President Gustavo Petro, or if the country will head into another highly ideological experiment.
The official favorite is Iván Cepeda, a veteran human-rights senator and close ally of Petro. He recently won the left's internal primary with around 1.5 million votes, making him the man to beat and a likely contender in a second round.
For many activists, he represents continuity: deeper reforms, a tougher stance on big business, and a peace policy that negotiates with almost every armed group at once.
For many ordinary Colombians, however, this looks like a high-risk bet in a country where most people still see themselves in the political middle.
That is where Juan Fernando Cristo and Roy Barreras enter the story. Cristo, a former interior minister with liberal roots, helped design the landmark Victims and Land Restitution Law and pushed the implementation of the FARC peace deal.
He now runs under his own revived party, En Marcha, promising institutional stability, fiscal realism and a government that“unites, not divides” – a subtle criticism of the constant confrontation that has defined recent years.
Test of disciplined governance without internal collapse
Barreras, a doctor by training and political survivor by instinct, has moved across the spectrum over his career and is now positioning himself as a centrist voice with a message of“total security.”
He distances himself from Petro 's“total peace” experiment, which has consumed energy without delivering a visible drop in violence or clear rules for investors and local communities.
Behind closed doors, these three and other figures are negotiating a Broad Front – a big-tent coalition that could hold a joint primary on the same day as the March 8 legislative elections.
The idea is simple but explosive: present voters with one single candidate who can inherit some of Petro's social agenda while calming markets, reassuring institutions and reconnecting with the middle-class majority.
For expats, investors and observers abroad, this is the real story: Colombia is testing whether its governing camp can pivot toward discipline, security and predictability without blowing itself up from within.
The key question is whether more moderate figures can tame and reshape the ambitious project launched by President Gustavo Petro, or if the country will head into another highly ideological experiment.
The official favorite is Iván Cepeda, a veteran human-rights senator and close ally of Petro. He recently won the left's internal primary with around 1.5 million votes, making him the man to beat and a likely contender in a second round.
For many activists, he represents continuity: deeper reforms, a tougher stance on big business, and a peace policy that negotiates with almost every armed group at once.
For many ordinary Colombians, however, this looks like a high-risk bet in a country where most people still see themselves in the political middle.
That is where Juan Fernando Cristo and Roy Barreras enter the story. Cristo, a former interior minister with liberal roots, helped design the landmark Victims and Land Restitution Law and pushed the implementation of the FARC peace deal.
He now runs under his own revived party, En Marcha, promising institutional stability, fiscal realism and a government that“unites, not divides” – a subtle criticism of the constant confrontation that has defined recent years.
Test of disciplined governance without internal collapse
Barreras, a doctor by training and political survivor by instinct, has moved across the spectrum over his career and is now positioning himself as a centrist voice with a message of“total security.”
He distances himself from Petro 's“total peace” experiment, which has consumed energy without delivering a visible drop in violence or clear rules for investors and local communities.
Behind closed doors, these three and other figures are negotiating a Broad Front – a big-tent coalition that could hold a joint primary on the same day as the March 8 legislative elections.
The idea is simple but explosive: present voters with one single candidate who can inherit some of Petro's social agenda while calming markets, reassuring institutions and reconnecting with the middle-class majority.
For expats, investors and observers abroad, this is the real story: Colombia is testing whether its governing camp can pivot toward discipline, security and predictability without blowing itself up from within.
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