Leftist Is Frontrunner After Colombia Presidential Primaries

Mar 14, 2022
12:58 PM

People check a voter list to confirm where they should cast their ballots during legislative elections in Bogota, Colombia, Sunday, March 13, 2022. (AP Photo/Fernando Vergara)

By MANUEL RUEDA, Associated Press

BOGOTÁ, Colombia (AP) — Colombians voted for a new congress on Sunday and also cast ballots in presidential primaries to choose party candidates for the May presidential contest, as the country held its first elections since the coronavirus pandemic began two years ago.

As opinion polls had indicated, leftist Sen. Gustavo Petro emerged as the current leader in the race for the presidency. With nearly all votes counted, he won the primary for the Historical Pact, a coalition of left-wing parties, with 80 percent of the more than 5.4 million votes cast in its primary.

Team Colombia, a coalition of conservative groups, drew 3.9 million voters to its primary, which was won by Federico Gutiérrez, a former mayor of Medellín who has criticized some aspects of the 2016 peace deal with Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia.

A group of centrist parties known as the Hope Coalition got two million voters in its primary, which was won by mathematician Sergio Fajardo, who also ran in the 2018 presidential election.

The three will compete in Colombia’s presidential election on May 29 along with several other candidates picked previously by smaller parties. If no one gets 50 percent of the votes, a runoff ballot would be held in June between the top two finishers.

“It looks like candidates in the center were the big losers in this election,” said Sergio Guzmán, a political risk analyst in Bogotá. “They showed divisions during the campaign and were not effective at getting voters to the polls.”

Petro got more than four million votes in Sunday’s primary, doubling the number of votes received by all five candidates in the center’s primary.

The Senator, who belonged to a rebel group in the 1980s, has sought to capitalize on growing frustration with Colombia’s conservative government, which has overseen an increase in poverty during the pandemic and last year faced big protests over a tax increase plan, police violence, and inequality.

Petro has promised to increase taxes on corporations and large landowners, and has suggested that if he becomes president the government will buy up some land to distribute to landless peasants. He has also said he would suspend oil exploration projects and have the government take a greater role in the economy, including ensuring a guaranteed annual income for Colombians.

“He speaks to the social needs that have risen during the pandemic, and were reflected in the protests,” said Johan Caldas, a political science professor at the University of La Sabana in Bogotá.

Petro’s critics contend he wants to install a statist economy in Colombia similar to Venezuela’s. One of his most outspoken critics is Gutiérrez, who described Petro in a recent interview as a threat to Colombia’s democracy.

“While he wants to expropriate property, I defend private property,” Gutiérrez told the Spanish newspaper El Pais. “While he wants the central bank to print more money as a way out of poverty, I want to strengthen the economy.”

Petro’s Historical Pact also had the most votes for the Senate list, drawing around 15 percent of the total votes. But that will not give the movement enough seats to have a majority in Congress.