https://newpol.org/electoral-setback-in-colombia-opens-a-new-phase-of-struggle/

This article is a little bit out of date. I will update it in another post.

New Politics By: Ted Zuur ( https://newpol.org/authors/ted-zuur/ ) July 14, 2026

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The razor thin loss of the left in the presidential election in Peru and the 
left’s rejection of the legitimacy of the election of US citizen and 
ultra-right candidate Abelardo de la Espriella in Colombia have set the stage 
for a new period of social and class conflict in Latin America.

The political temperature in Colombia continues to rise following the contested 
official election results that have made extreme-right wing candidate Abelardo 
de la Espriella the presumptive president elect.

President Gustavo Petro has rejected the electoral results and called for 
national demonstrations on July 20 th , the day the new congress is to be 
seated. He wrote on X,

“The president of Colombia does not recognize the legitimacy of the incoming 
government. Abelardo did not win the elections.

“The national majority is called upon this July 20th to raise the cry of 
national independence in all public squares.”

Since the elections

On June 24, three days after the final round of Colombia’s presidential 
election, Senator Ivan Cepeda, the presidential candidate of the left-wing 
Pacto Historico and Alianza por la Vida, conceded the presidential race to 
Abelardo de la Espriella, the right-wing candidate and now the presumptive 
president elect of Colombia.

Cepeda said, “At this stage of the scrutiny of the ballots and voting, I have 
decided to accept the results of that process. They indicate that Abelardo de 
la Espriella is the new president of the Republic. I do it as an act of 
democratic responsibility… However, acceptance of the electoral result does not 
mean giving up the truth or remaining silent in the face of events that we 
consider serious and that marked this presidential campaign.”

Then, just six days later, Cepeda demanded that de la Espriella renounce his US 
citizenship and his ties to US intelligence and police agencies as a condition 
of assuming the presidency of Colombia. De la Espriella is a citizen of 
Colombia by birth, a naturalized citizen of the United States who has sworn to 
renounce all allegiances to all other countries, and also a citizen of Italy.

Cepeda called on the judicial authorities to act to protect Colombian 
sovereignty and called on the people of the country to engage in peaceful civil 
disobedience if de la Espriella does not renounce his ties to the USA.

President Gustavo Petro’s rejection of the election results and call for 
demonstrations began with the statement that,

“We have all the information regarding the IP server located in Los Angeles, 
California, owned by the Bautista brothers, which was integrated into the vote 
counting operation. Algorithms were used that substantially altered the vote 
count in favor of Abelardo. The algorithms that rigged the election results 
were used with the voter registration lists of those who never vote, replacing 
them with voters who could vote multiple times or with no registered voters at 
the polling stations.

“The polling stations abroad where Abelardo obtained 177,000 more votes than 
Cepeda had poll workers from Colombia who were not residents of the US or 
Spain, which is illegal. These polling stations also included voters brought in 
for the World Cup who were able to vote seven times using the names of those 
who never vote.

“The same thing happened in several regions of Antioquia and Medellín, in Norte 
de Santander, and at polling stations in northern Bogotá…. “The company that 
supplied the Bautista brothers with flawed algorithms and other support is an 
Israeli private intelligence firm called BlackCube.”

The opaque vote collection and counting software is owned by a private firm 
known as Thomas Greg and Sons. The company is owned by the Bautista family, 
Colombians now based in the United States. They have close ties to right-wing 
establishment politicians in both the United States and Colombia, and some of 
them have been convicted of financial crimes in the USA.

Separately, Petro announced that the government has uncovered evidence that a 
prominent Trump supporter in the United States named Dan Newlin had illegally 
donated $1.8 million to de la Espriella’s campaign. Newlin is a criminal 
defense attorney who has offices in Florida, Illinois, and in Medellin, 
Colombia. Trump had nominated him to be US ambassador to Colombia, but the 
nomination was rejected by the GOP dominated Senate Foreign Relations committee.

De la Espriella’s political position is rapidly deteriorating before he can 
even take office. Now, he says that his first action in office will be to issue 
a decree to establish an “urban defense force” reminiscent of Convivir, the 
legal cover used in the past by the Colombian paramilitary militias and death 
squads.

Although the situation in the country is very fluid and uncertain, tensions are 
rapidly rising between the left and right in Colombia, and between Latin 
American countries and the United States.

Who really won the election?

The National Election Council’s official vote count gave Abelardo de la 
Espriella 12,959,542 votes, less than 1% more than the 12,708,712 votes of 
Senator Ivan Cepeda. The voter turnout of 63.6 % was a record for this country.

The final complete official results were announced even though there had 
already been more than 57,000 challenges to irregularities such as vote buying 
and electronic fraud before Petro’s own announcement.

The widespread incidents of various types of fraud and irregularities had 
already led many supporters of the Pacto Historico to question Cepeda’s 
concession.

Luis Guillermo Perez Casas, a leader of the Pacto Historico, is heading the 
effort to collect evidence throughout the country at 
[email protected]. Casas is a human rights lawyer who served as 
Secretary General for the Americas of the International Federation for Human 
Rights (FIDH). So far, nearly 200,000 Colombians have signed up to help the 
effort.

A wide variety of irregularities and frauds have been recorded in addition to 
those related directly to US intervention. They include votes cast by dead 
people and children, photos of votes used to collect payments from vote buyers, 
officials of the registrar of voters preventing poll watchers from doing their 
jobs, and changes made to vote certifications after they had been filed.

If the vote count is not overturned, de la Espriella will take office on August 
7. Until then, the current leftwing president, Gustavo Petro, will remain in 
office although he has already begun the transitional process of handing over 
the government to de la Espriella.

Under Colombia’s constitution, the losing candidate of the final round of 
voting for president automatically becomes a member of the country’s newly 
elected Senate. Nevertheless, the right is now talking about trying to block 
Cepeda from taking his seat in the senate if Cepeda does not recognize the 
official election results. If seated, Cepeda will become the President of the 
Senate (with powers similar to the Senate majority leader in the USA) since the 
Pacto Historico has the largest block in the Senate. The members of the newly 
elected Senate and Chamber of Representatives will be seated on July 20.

A Polarized and Divided Country

This election continued trends apparent in the last election: while the 
multiparty system lives on in the legislative branch and in departmental and 
municipal governments, Colombia’s multiparty system is collapsing towards a new 
two-party system in presidential elections and the center is disappearing.

The new binary system is not a repeat of the old system of the Liberal Party 
and Conservative Party. Those old parties were led by different sections of the 
ruling class which had evolved from before the country’s struggle for 
independence. Their corrupt but violence plagued rule was transformed with the 
inauguration of the country’s 1991 constitution.

Instead, those two old parties and the various factions and machines of which 
they had been composed are now coalescing into one new right wing ruling class 
conglomeration.

They still hate each other as much as ever, but more than they hate each other, 
they fear the growing power of the working class and the oppressed. That power 
is coalescing into the new political party called the Pacto Historico.

The Pacto Historico is the current incarnation of a series of electoral 
coalitions of the left which formed for reasons more closely related to 
electoral law requirements and a drive to elect leaders of the left than from 
any serious desire to create a unified party of the working class and the 
oppressed. Despite its often reactive, haphazard, and improvised history, the 
Pacto has become a very close approximation to a mass party of the working 
class and oppressed. Its voter base consists mostly of the urban working class, 
and the organizations which support it include the country’s unions, much of 
its indigenous and Afro-descendant populations, and large parts of the 
feminist, LGBTQ+ and environmentalist movements.

A good approximation of the ascendant growth curve of the left in Colombia is 
found in its presidential election results which you can see in the chart below.

Year

Candidate

Party

First Round

Second Round

votes

%

votes

%

2002

Luis Eduardo Garzon

Polo Democratico Independiente

680,000

6.16%

2006

Carlos Gaviria Polo

Democratico Alternativa

2,613,000

22.03%

2010

Gustavo Petro

Polo Democratico Alternativa

1,331,000

9.14%

2014

Clara Lopez

Polo Democratico Alternativa

1,958.5180

15.22%

2018

Gustavo Petro

Colombia Humana

4,855,069

25.09%

8,040,449

41.77%

2022

Gustavo Petro

Colombia Humana/Pacto Historico

8,542,020

40.34%

11,292,758

50.42%

2026

Ivan Cepeda

Pacto Historico/Alianz a por la Vida

9,688,361

40.90%

12,708,712

48.70%

It’s worth noting that in 2010 and 2014, the Green Party ran presidential 
candidates which took votes away from the candidates of the Polo Democratico 
(In 2010 Antanas Mockus received 3,134,000 votes or 21.51%, and in 2014 Enrique 
Peñalosa received 1,064,000 votes or 8.27%.) Those were the only elections in 
which the Greens ran presidential campaigns in this country.

The Cabinet of Los que Siempre (Those who have always)

Much has been made of de la Espriella’s slickly packaged campaign, use of 
social media and artificial intelligence, and clever campaign slogans. Although 
all of this is true, the keys to his victory lay in the fact that he was an 
unknown quantity who appeared to be conservative and on the right. Unofficially 
and behind the scenes, his campaign united the political machinery of the 
right-wing parties to mobilize the conservative layers of Colombia’s middle 
class.

He campaigned as a political outsider, using the campaigns of Donald Trump in 
the USA, Nayib Bukele in El Salvador, Javier Milei in Argentina, and Rodolfo 
Hernandez here in Colombia (the candidate of the Colombian right who lost the 
2022 presidential election) as his templates. As in those campaigns, de la 
Espriella is far from being an outsider, but he was a blank slate to the 
public. His dark past as a front man for the paramilitary AUC, as an attorney 
for drug dealers, money launderers and corrupt politicians, and as a close 
collaborator of the DEA and FBI, only began to become public as the campaign 
neared its end.

His campaign was built on lies. A man who had professed to be an atheist, he 
embraced religion and appealed especially to the growing evangelical churches 
of the country. He has placed two of their leaders in his new cabinet.

Knowing that the conservative petty bourgeoisie of the country had turned their 
backs on the traditional right-wing leadership, he promised he would make no 
deals with the traditional political parties and form a government of “los que 
nunca” (‘Those who never’ which means something like “the have nots” in 
English.) The slogan was a promise to rid the country of the corrupt right-wing 
politicians while remaining true to conservative values.

His choice of a vice president should have told his voters that this was a lie.

The new Vice President, Jose Manuel Restrepo, is a Colombian blue blood who is 
the descendant of three presidents and who was Minister of Finance in the 
scandal ridden government of Ivan Duque. Restrepo appears to be the de facto 
leader of the new government. Since the election, de la Espriella has 
disappeared from public view while Restrepo is constantly in the news and is 
leading the transition team of the new government.

If the choice of Restrepo did not alert de la Espriella’s voter base to his 
bait and switch game, his cabinet appointments have. His newly minted ministers 
mostly served in the right-wing governments of Alvaro Uribe and Ivan Duque, and 
key members are drawn from the elite of two of the most corrupt family 
dynasties of Colombia’s right: the Char family of Barranquilla which now 
controls the party known as Cambio Radical, and the Pastrana family which 
dominates the Conservative Party. That party’s patriarch is former President 
Andrés Pastrana who is famous for his 33 entries in the Epstein files.

The Cabinet of Los que Siempre (Those who have always)

Faction

Name

Ministry

Notes

Char Family

Elsa Noguera

Minister of Transportation

Husband is a convicted drug dealer

Char Family

Rodrigo Lara Restrepo

Minister of the Interior

His father was a Minister of Justice who was assassinated at the orders of 
Pablo Escobar.

Char Family

Mauricio Gómez

Minister of Foreign Commerce

Pastrana Family

Miguel Gómez Martínez

Minister of Finance

Grandson of Laureano Gomez, the most extreme right wing President in the 
history of Colombia.

Uribe Machine

Iván Cancino González

Minister of Justice

(Uribe, Gilinski, Odebrecht)

Uribe Machine

Lorena Angarita

Minister of Technology, Information and Communications

internet activist and senatorial candidate with no apparent education or 
qualifications

Uribe Machine

Paloma Valencia

Mines and Energy

Official Presidential candidate of Alvaro Uribe’s Centro Democratico

Evangelicals

Viviane Morales

Minister of Education

Former Procurador

Evangelicals

Jaime Andres Beltran

Minister of Housing

Former Mayor of Bucaramanga removed from office for violating election laws.

National Salvation Party

Retired General Jorge Eduardo Mora López

Minister of Defense

Career military officer closely connected to DEA. Removed by Petro from chain 
of command after he was investigated, but not convicted, for corruption. 
Senatorial candidate for the extreme right wing National Salvation Party

Unaffiliated

Fabio Alberto Arjona Hincapié

Minister of the Environment

A supposed environmentalist who supports fracking as well as strip mining of 
sensitive environments in the Andes

Plans and Threats

De la Espriella has made many promises and threats which involve aggressively 
using executive decrees rather than going through the legislative processes 
beginning with his attempt to use the transition process to witch hunt members 
of the current government.

Much of what he wants to do requires legislative action under the Colombian 
constitution, and other goals are flatly unconstitutional. While his campaign 
claims that all of the parties in the legislative branch except the Pacto 
Historico and the Alianza Verde have agreed to support the new government, this 
has not been confirmed by all of the party leaders, and even if they do, it is 
unlikely that they will be able to control all of their own parties’ 
legislators.

De la Espriella says he wants to diminish the size of the state, transfer 
powers and revenue from the central government to the notoriously corrupt 
departmental and municipal governments; encourage private investment, mining 
and fossil fuel; and launch a major offensive against armed groups and 
drug-trafficking organizations. All in the first 100 days of his government.

He also plans to resume aerial coca eradication using bioherbicides, build 10 
Bukele style mega-prisons, revoke decrees against the use of the armed forces 
against civilian populations, subsidize the private health care system with an 
additional 10 trillion Colombian pesos, and launch a witch hunt against Gustavo 
Petro, officials who have served in his government, and the Pacto Historico.

More than these publicly advertised measures, de la Espriella has proposed to 
roll back the pension and land reforms of the Petro government, and despite his 
public pronouncements to the contrary, is expected to try to roll back the 
major gains in the minimum salary made under Petro’s government and 
improvements made to public education.

Where did the votes come from?

Regardless of whether de la Espriella’s election is legitimate and regardless 
of how many votes were falsely attributed to de la Espriella, Colombia is 
clearly divided into four major political sectors: the approximately 16,000,000 
people who were eligible to vote but did not, the almost 10,000,000 politically 
active working class and oppressed voters of the Pacto Historico in the first 
round of voting, the 12,000,000 politically active middle-class and upper 
middle-class voters who voted for the right in the first round of the 
elections, and about 2,000,000 politically active swing voters.

A close look at the statistics and maps reveals that the Pacto Historico’s 
votes came from the poor and working-class neighborhoods of the big cities and 
from the Afro-Colombian and Indigenous regions of the country. In contrast, the 
votes of the right come from the middle class and upper middle-class 
neighborhoods of the big cities, and from the small cities and towns in the 
Andean region of the country which are still dominated by the old political 
machines. These same areas also account for much of the politically inactive 
population. Swing voters can be found everywhere but are mostly concentrated in 
the middle-class neighborhoods of the big cities.

This election revealed two big changes in the electorate. First, a large number 
of people who had never voted turned out at the polls, and most of these new 
voters supported the Pacto Historico. Second, the middle classes shifted to the 
right. The Pacto Historico’s winning margins decreased in some cities including 
Bogotá and in middle-class and upper middle-class precincts throughout the 
country.

This shift can be attributed to several factors. First, despite falling crime 
rates, the mainstream media has spent four years amplifying every crime 
committed in every city of the country and blaming Petro’s government for them. 
Second, Petro’s program of Paz Total (Total Peace) has failed to bring about 
the disarmament and demobilization of the armed groups that control the illegal 
drug trade and some isolated rural areas of the county. Third, the conflict 
between Petro’s government and the private health care industry has resulted in 
delays and denials of health care among patients who pay for premium health 
care services, and this has angered much of the
middle classes.

Fourth, the large increase in the minimum salary has caused the monthly 
administration fees in condominium complexes to go up and has increased the pay 
for the millions of women who work as maids and house cleaners. This has 
infuriated these voters even when they would be embarrassed to say so.

>From 1970 to 2026 This election echoes the tumultuous election theft of 1970 
>but is very different in many, many respects. From 1958 to 1974, the two 
>traditional parties of the Colombian ruling class, the Conservatives and 
>Liberals, ruled the country in a more or less friendly power sharing 
>agreement. Each party agreed to let the other party rule and take the lion’s 
>share of the spoils of office for four years, and to then take over for their 
>own turn at stealing from the public trough.

This agreement was called the National Front. In 1970, it was the Conservative 
Party’s turn to win the presidential election, so the Liberal Party did not run 
a presidential candidate. Unfortunately for the two parties, the former 
military dictator, Gustavo Rojas Pinilla, who had been turned out of power by 
the National Front agreement, decided to run against the Conservative Party 
candidate, Misael Pastrana.

Pinilla was winning the election when the government stopped reporting results, 
then declared a state of emergency, and then declared that Pastrana had won the 
election. For days after the election, there was fighting in the streets, and 
schools and business were closed.
Three years later, a new guerrilla movement, the April 19 Movement (Movimiento 
del 19 de abril, M-19), was formed in reaction to the election theft. Its most 
important aim was to fight for the simple democratic right of one person one 
vote. As a youth, Gustavo Petro joined M-19, and not much later, Ivan Cepeda 
joined the legal political party that it became after it demobilized in 1990. 
Both the Pacto Historico and the Alianza Verde are in important ways descended 
from M-19.

This time around, the right-wing will have a much more difficult time stealing 
the election. For one thing, Gustavo Petro is still president and commander in 
chief of the Colombian military, police and intelligence agencies. Even though 
the right wing maintains a powerful network within the miliary, police and 
government bureaucracy, it is far from having the control it exercised in 1970.

On the other hand, the Colombian left now has a mass party which did not exist 
in 1970, and most of the left has come in from the cold from its terrible 
detour into guerrillerismo.


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