The Guardian (USA)

‘Let’s make history’: Colombia could elect first leftist president in runoff

- Joe Parkin Daniels

Voters head to the polls in Colombia on Sunday in a historic presidenti­al election that could see the left win for the first time in the conservati­ve South American country.

Gustavo Petro, a former guerrilla and mayor of Bogotá, will face off against Rodolfo Hernández, a populist business tycoon and the former mayor of the city of Bucaramang­a, in a contest where both candidates have cast themselves as political outsiders.

Both men are divisive, gaff-prone and high-handed, and the campaign ahead of the election was bitter, with each candidate accusing the other of corruption. Hernández – who is under investigat­ion for graft – refused to debate Petro and briefly relocated to Miami after claiming his life was at risk.

Hernández shocked Colombia when he made it to Sunday’s runoff after ousting a number of career politician­s from the race in the first round of voting on 29 May.

Petro took the most votes then, some 8.5m, but could not muster enough to pass the 50% threshold required to win outright. Sunday would mark the first time Colombia is led by a leftist.

“We are one step away from achieving the real change we have waited all our lives for. There are no doubts, only certaintie­s. Let’s make history,” Petro said in a video shared on social media on Wednesday.

“You decide: vote for those who have been embedded in power for more than 30 years or for someone who has worked for their family,” tweeted Hernández, who has eschewed traditiona­l rallies and relied on social media – particular­ly TikTok – to reach voters.

Whoever wins on Sunday will have his work cut out. The country is still recovering from anti-inequality protests that shook the country last year, and the 2016 peace deal with the leftist Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc) hangs in the balance. That deal formally ended decades of civil war that killed 260,000 people and displaced 7 million, though has only been implemente­d haltingly.

But whichever candidate triumphs, history will be made, as both men share their ticket with female Afro-Colombians – meaning that Colombia’s next vice-president will be a black woman. Petro’s running mate, Francia Márquez is a rural activist who won the prestigiou­s Goldman environmen­tal prize; Hernandez’s partner on the ticket is Marelen Castillo, a little-known university director and conservati­ve Catholic.

“One of the things that makes this election stand out is that it draws apart the traditiona­l political forces that have been waging power in the country for two decades,” said Sergio Guzmán, an analyst who runs the consultanc­y Colombia Risk Analysis. “It’s a stark departure from where the country has been and it leads to an uncharted path.”

 ?? Photograph: Raúl Arboleda/AFP/Getty Images ?? A worker helps prepare a polling station in Bogota ahead of the weekend's presidenti­al runoff election.
Photograph: Raúl Arboleda/AFP/Getty Images A worker helps prepare a polling station in Bogota ahead of the weekend's presidenti­al runoff election.
 ?? Martin Mejia, Fernando Vergara/AP ?? Gustavo Petro and Rodolfo Hernández are facing off in the polls on Sunday. Photograph:
Martin Mejia, Fernando Vergara/AP Gustavo Petro and Rodolfo Hernández are facing off in the polls on Sunday. Photograph:

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