Times Standard (Eureka)

Ex-rebel, businessma­n to vie in presidenti­al runoff

- By Astrid Suarez and Regina Garcia Cano

BOGOTA, COLOMBIA » Colombian voters opted for a dramatic change in presidenti­al politics, choosing a leftist former rebel and an outsider populist businessma­n to advance to a runoff election in June amid hopes a new face can pull them out of the economic damage from the pandemic.

Leftist Sen. Gustavo Petro led the field of six candidates Sunday with just over 40% of the votes, while real estate tycoon Rodolfo Hernández, who has no close ties to any political parties, finished second with more than 28%, election officials reported.

Both are far different from the conservati­ves and moderates that have long governed the South American country.

Petro, the front-runner throughout the campaign, could become Colombia’s first head of state from the left, which for years has been marginaliz­ed for its perceived associatio­n with the nation’s armed conflict. Hernández, whose showing surprised many, has been compared to former U.S. President Donald Trump for his anti-establishm­ent rhetoric.

They will face off June 19 in the same polarized environmen­t and growing discontent over increasing inequality and inflation that shadowed the election’s first round. A candidate needed 50% of the votes to win outright in the opening round.

There has been a series of leftist political victories in Latin America, where voters have been dissatisfi­ed with the economic situation. Chile, Peru and Honduras elected leftist presidents in 2021, and in Brazil, former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva is leading the polls for this year’s presidenti­al election. Mexico elected a leftist president in 2018.

A victory by Petro could pose challenges to the U.S., which has backed Colombia’s fight against leftist rebels and drug trafficker­s for decades.

Petro wants to renegotiat­e a free trade agreement with the U.S. that has boosted imports of American products like powdered milk and corn. and instead favor local producers.

He also promises to change how Colombia fights drug cartels that produce around 90% of cocaine currently sold in the U.S. The senator often criticizes U.S. drug policy in the hemisphere, saying it focuses too much on eradicatin­g illegal crops and arresting kingpins. He wants to boost help for rural areas, to give farmers alternativ­es to growing coca, the plant used to make cocaine.

Hernandez, meanwhile, won in some of Colombia’s most traditiona­lly conservati­ve department­s. “The rejection of the status quo even among many of the most conservati­ve Colombians ... really does show a disgust with the traditiona­l workings of Colombian politics,” said Adam Isacson, an expert on Colombia at the Washington Office on Latin America think tank.

Hernandez surged at the campaign’s end to slip past Federico Gutierrez, a former mayor of Medellin who was seen as the continuity candidate and ran on a probusines­s, economic growth platform.

Petro has promised to make significan­t adjustment­s to the economy, including tax reform, and to change how Colombia fights drug cartels and other armed groups. Hernández promises to reduce wasteful government spending and to offer rewards for people who report corrupt officials.

“What is in dispute today is change. The political parties allied to the government of (incumbent Ivan) Duque, his political project, has been defeated in Colombia,” Petro told his supporters as they celebrated at his campaign headquarte­rs in Bogotá. He said the vote sends “that message to the world: A period is ending; an era is ending.”

Hernández, in a livestream after early results showed he advanced to the runoff, said he remains committed to end “corruption as a system of government.”

“These next few days will be decisive in determinin­g the future of the country,” he said.

This was the second presidenti­al election held since the government signed in 2016 a peace agreement with the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia, known as FARC for its initials in Spanish. But the divisive agreement was not a main issue during the campaign, which focused on poverty, inflation and other challenges exacerbate­d by the pandemic.

It is Petro’s third attempt to become president. He was defeated in 2018 by Duque, who was not eligible to seek reelection.

In a sign of the resistance to a leftist government, Gutierrez endorsed Hernández shortly after he failed to advance to the runoff.

“Knowing that our position is decisive for the future of Colombia, we have made a decision ... We do not want to lose the country,” Gutierrez said, adding that he would support Hernández because he does not want to put Colombia “at risk.”

 ?? FERNANDO VERGARA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Presidenti­al candidate Gustavo Petro, with the Historical Pact coalition, gives a thumbs up to supporters on election night in Bogota, Colombia, Sunday.
FERNANDO VERGARA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Presidenti­al candidate Gustavo Petro, with the Historical Pact coalition, gives a thumbs up to supporters on election night in Bogota, Colombia, Sunday.

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