The Guardian (USA)

US embassy warns Colombian politician­s not to get involved in US elections

- Joe Parkin Daniels in Bogotá

The American embassy in Bogotá has warned Colombian politician­s to “avoid getting involved” in the US election, amid a growing row over allegation­s that far-right lawmakers from the South American country are campaignin­g in support of Donald Trump.

At least three senior Colombian politician­s have been accused of acting as Trump surrogates in Florida, a pivotal battlegrou­nd state which has been flooded with political advertisin­g and fake news aimed at Latino voters.

Senators María Fernanda Cabal and Carlos Felipe Mejía, and congressma­n Juan David Vélez, all members of the hard-right ruling Democratic Centre party, have endorsed Trump and regularly promote him on Twitter.

Francisco Santos, Colombia’s ambassador to the United States, has also been accused by opposition lawmakers of privately coordinati­ng with the Trump campaign. Santos did not respond to requests for comment.

On Monday, the US ambassador, Philip S Goldberg, took the unusual step of issuing a warning to Colombian lawmakers.

“The success of relations between the US and Colombia over many years has been based on bipartisan support,” he tweeted. “I urge all Colombian politician­s to avoid getting involved in US elections.”

Colombia’s foreign minister, Claudia Blum, has been summoned to testify on Wednesday before the country’s congress on the brewing scandal.

Florida – with 29 votes in the electoral college – is a key battlegrou­nd state in the 3 November election, and the Latino vote is seen as critical.

As the race enters its final stretch, the state has been flooded with Spanish-language disinforma­tion, shared on WhatsApp, Facebook and Twitter. Some content portrays Trump’s Democratic opponent, Joe Biden, as a patsy of the hard left, but other articles portray him a successor to Latin American leftist dictators such as Cuba’s Fidel Castro and Venezuela’s Hugo Chávez.

Trump himself has adopted similar arguments. Earlier this month, he tweeted that Biden was “a PUPPET of CASTRO-CHAVISTAS” and claimed “Biden is weak on socialism and will betray Colombia” – a near-verbatim regurgitat­ion of a Democratic Centre talking point.

The tweet also mentioned Gustavo Petro, a former presidenti­al candidate and mayor of Bogotá who once was a member of the country’s now-defunct M-19 guerrilla group. Although he is probably unknown to most US voters, Petro remains a hate figure for the Colombian right.

In columns published on the Colombian website Periódico Debate and often shared in the US, Cabal has argued that Biden has been led by the “radical socialist wing” of the Democratic party, that coronaviru­s was “hatched” in China as part of a Marxist plot, and that the Minnesota representa­tive Ilhan Omar is an apologist for “militant Antifa groups fighting in Syria”.

Cabal, who has hobnobbed with prominent Republican­s at the past seven Conservati­ve Political Action Conference­s (CPAC), said that she is not in direct contact with the Trump cam

paign.

“Of course I’m campaignin­g for Trump and have been doing so since he first announced his candidacy, that’s not a crime,” Senator Cabal told the Guardian. “I have the absolute right to campaign for whoever I want.”

Unlike Cabal, Vélez lives in Miami and commutes to Bogotá for congressio­nal sessions. In an interview, he said that as a dual Colombian-American citizen, he is merely exercising his constituti­onal rights by campaignin­g for Trump. “But I am not coordinati­ng with the Trump campaign,” he said. Mejía did not respond to a request for comment.

Opposition senator Iván Cepeda has launched a senate investigat­ion into the Democratic Centre politician­s’ activities, and argues that they may have infringed US laws prohibitin­g foreign involvemen­t in its elections.

“There is a line being crossed, and it could be crossing into something that is illegal,” Cepeda said.

Even if their behaviour is legal, Cepeda said, it sets a worrying precedent in a nation that has long been viewed by Washington as key ally in the war on drugs and remains a closer partner in a coalition to dislodge the Venezuelan strongman, Nicolás Maduro.

“This is a break from the bipartisan relations that Colombia has had with the US,” Cepeda said. “This government has broken a basic and fundamenta­l norm, and that could have consequenc­es.”

“Getting involved in another country’s elections is a classic foreign policy faux pas, and needlessly jeopardize­s future diplomatic relationsh­ips,” said Benjamin Gedan, deputy director of the Latin America program at the Wilson Center, a Washington thinktank. “It is not as bad as covert Russian meddling, but it’s risky.”

 ?? Photograph: Marco Bello/AFP/Getty Images ?? A Trump supporter rallies outside the Latinos for Trump even in Doral, Florida.
Photograph: Marco Bello/AFP/Getty Images A Trump supporter rallies outside the Latinos for Trump even in Doral, Florida.

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