Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Colombia's Right Coalesces Behind De La Espriella For June Runoff


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) COLOMBIA · POLITICS

Key Facts

- The result: Abelardo de la Espriella led the first round with more than 10 million votes; Iván Cepeda of the Historic Pact followed with around 9 million.

- The runoff: The two advance to a second round on Sunday, June 21, 2026; the winner takes office on August 7 for the 2026–2030 term.

- The endorsement: Paloma Valencia, who finished third with 1,638,115 votes, said Sunday night she would back De la Espriella.

- The party line: Former president Álvaro Uribe and the Democratic Center, plus Cambio Radical, also declared support for De la Espriella.

- The framing: The endorsements consolidate the right-of-center vote, though analysts caution that voter transfer is not automatic.

Within hours of Colombia's first-round result, the country's right coalesces behind Abelardo de la Espriella, with third-placed Paloma Valencia, former president Álvaro Uribe and the Cambio Radical party all declaring support ahead of the June 21 runoff against Iván Cepeda of the governing Historic Pact. The endorsements reshape the second-round arithmetic, though analysts stress that voters do not transfer mechanically.

How Colombia's right coalesces after the first round

With nearly all polling tables reported by the national civil registry, Abelardo de la Espriella of the Defenders of the Homeland movement finished first, surpassing 10 million votes. Iván Cepeda of the Historic Pact came second with around 9 million, setting up the June 21 runoff.

Paloma Valencia of the Democratic Center finished third with 1,638,115 votes, roughly 6 to 7%, falling well short of the top two. In her first public statement after the results, she announced from a Bogotá hotel that she would support De la Espriella in the second round.

What Valencia and Uribe said

Valencia framed her endorsement as a bid to keep Colombia from what she called the hands of communism, associating Cepeda and President Gustavo Petro with that risk. She read the vote for De la Espriella as an expression of public discontent with the current government.

Uribe, who had signalled earlier in the year that his movement would back whichever right-of-center candidate advanced, acknowledged the Democratic Center's defeat and confirmed his support. He cast it as consistency with his principles, citing the defence of the constitution, individual liberties and a small, austere state.

How Cepeda's camp frames the contest

Cepeda advanced as the candidate of the Historic Pact, the coalition aligned with President Petro, running with vice-presidential pick Aída Quilcué. His campaign casts the runoff as a defence of the progressive agenda begun under the current government against a resurgent right.

For the Historic Pact, the consolidation of right-of-center endorsements behind De la Espriella sharpens the second round into a clear left-right contest, a framing both camps appear willing to embrace from opposite directions.

The arithmetic, and its limits

On paper, adding Valencia's first-round share to De la Espriella's lead would lift the right-of-center bloc toward a majority. But analysts interviewed by Colombian outlets caution that endorsements do not guarantee a clean transfer of votes, and that some of Valencia's supporters may not follow her lead.

One analyst noted that the dynamic looked less like De la Espriella courting Uribe than Uribe adhering to De la Espriella, a distinction that matters for how the alliance is perceived. The direction of Valencia's electorate, and of other defeated candidates' voters, remains the central open question of the runoff.

What comes next

The second round is set for June 21, with the winner due to take office on August 7 for the 2026–2030 presidential term. Police reported the first round passed without major disruption, with a number of arrests but no significant incidents.

Both campaigns now enter three weeks of intensive runoff campaigning, with the bloc endorsements setting the terms of a contest that will determine the direction of Colombian government for the rest of the decade.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who are the two runoff candidates?

Abelardo de la Espriella of the Defenders of the Homeland movement, who led the first round, and Iván Cepeda of the governing Historic Pact.

When is the runoff?

Sunday, June 21, 2026. The winner takes office on August 7 for the 2026–2030 term.

Who has endorsed De la Espriella?

Third-placed Paloma Valencia, former president Álvaro Uribe and the Democratic Center, and the Cambio Radical party.

Do these endorsements decide the runoff?

Not automatically. Analysts note that endorsements do not guarantee voters will transfer, leaving the direction of defeated candidates' supporters an open question.

Connected Coverage

For the full first-round outcome, see our coverage of Colombia's first-round result, and follow the wider regional calendar in our Latin America election watch.

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