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Colombians prepare to choose their next president

China

Colombians prepare to choose their next president
China

China

Colombians prepare to choose their next president

2026-05-31 22:25 Last Updated At:22:37

Colombians are heading to the polls on Sunday to elect their next president. The country's constitution prevents the current President, Gustavo Petro, from running for a second term.

Yet, many see this election as a referendum on the policies of Gustavo Petro, Colombia's first leftist president.

There are 14 candidates on Sunday's ballot, but the polls show it will likely be a tight three-way race.

The frontrunner is Ivan Cepeda, a 63-year-old three-term senator, representing President Gustavo Petro's party, the Historic Pact coalition. Cepeda has vowed to defend and deepen Petro's progressive reforms and social justice policies to reduce inequality. He also promises to continue the government's controversial "Total Peace" strategy to negotiate the disarmament of remaining guerrilla groups and criminal gangs.

"True prosperity comes from equality, from access to rights, and from transforming the peripheral and excluded territories of the rural world," Cepeda said at a campaign rally.

Running as a political outsider and independent is Abelardo de la Espriella, a 47-year-old lawyer, nicknamed "The Tiger." He has presented himself as the "authority and order" candidate who will reduce state spending by up to 40 percent in the next four years.

"(First,) we must fight insecurity. Colombia is suffering today from a pandemic of insecurity. Crime is out of control: extortion, cattle theft, smuggling, drug trafficking," he said to his supporters at an election event.

According to polls, the third candidate with strong support is Paloma Valencia. The 48-year-old senator represents the Democratic Center party led by popular former President Alvaro Uribe Velez. Her candidacy is backed by politicians and economists who are concerned with growing levels of public debt. They want to see a return to more conservative fiscal policies.

"I don't want to be a president who governs alone, locked away in glass offices. I want to be a president who stands with citizens, who embraces them, who reaches out to them, who has a team, and who governs to transform Colombia," the candidate said at the campaign event

According to polls earlier in the year, many voters are expressing concerns about unemployment, rising living costs, corruption, and, above all, public security.

The election comes after a turbulent year that the International Committee of the Red Cross has called "the worst humanitarian consequences of armed conflict over the past decade."

"(We arrive at this election in a tense atmosphere - tense) because of the economic situation, because of the security situation, and because of the narratives that have been built around the country's main problems. On top of that, emotions, ideas and social media have all helped raise (the tone,)" said Eduardo Velosa, associate professor from International Studies Javeriana University.

If no candidate receives 50 percent of the vote, a runoff election will be held between the top two finishers on June 21st.

Colombians prepare to choose their next president

Colombians prepare to choose their next president

The death toll in Lebanon from Israeli attacks has risen to 3,371, with 10,129 others injured, since March 2, said the country's health ministry on Saturday.

Israeli airstrikes and drone attacks across southern Lebanon late Friday and into Saturday killed at least 15 people and wounded several others, according to the ministry.

The Israel Defense Forces said in a statement on Sunday that they are carrying out strikes on Hezbollah's infrastructure in the southern Lebanese city of Tyre and several other areas.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday that he had instructed the military to deepen and expand its grip on Lebanese areas held by Hezbollah.

The instruction followed the capture of the Beaufort Ridge, including the strategic castle at its summit, in southern Lebanon by Israeli forces, an area beyond the "security zone" Israel has maintained since a ceasefire took effect in mid-April.

The current objective is to consolidate control over these captured positions, he said, calling the seizure of the Beaufort "a dramatic stage and a dramatic shift in the policy we are leading."

Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said the same day that the Israeli army will remain stationed at the strategic Beaufort Castle as part of the "security zone."

Katz also said that taking control of the castle and expanding ground military operations sent a message to the opponents -- "whoever threatens the citizens of Israel will lose their strategic assets one after another."

On Friday, the negotiations between the military delegations of Lebanon and Israel in Washington D.C., the Unite States, failed to reach a ceasefire agreement.

Lebanese death toll from Israeli attacks rises to 3,371

Lebanese death toll from Israeli attacks rises to 3,371

Lebanese death toll from Israeli attacks rises to 3,371

Lebanese death toll from Israeli attacks rises to 3,371

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