Posts tagged election
Colombia: Uribe’s Man Wins Runoff Election
2The polls had been barely closed for 40 minutes when Juan Manuel Santos, candidate for the U (Unity) party was declared the winner in today’s runoff elections. With almost all polls reporting at this hour, Santos leads his rival, Antanas Mockus of the Green Party by a whopping five million votes.
A marked departure from the first vote on May 30th, opinion polls accurately predicted the second round’s outcome, Santos gathering about 69 percent of the popular vote against approximately 27 percent for Mockus. The remaining votes were either blank or disqualified. Many here had expressed the opinion that a headline grabbing military operation last week that liberated four important hostages, including a general, would sway votes in favor of Santos. However, it appears that the landslide victory had been predicated in the first round of voting, where Santos almost attained the 50 percent plus one needed to prevent a runoff. Many who had supported the dark horse, Mockus, had voted for other candidates, perhaps scared by the many controversial statements uttered by the eccentric but charismatic former mayor of Bogota.
Mockus did little to help his cause during the three weeks prior to today, alienating other first round candidates, even those with ideologies compatible with his own. Meanwhile, Santos invited all losing candidates, including Mockus, to join him in the formation of an unity government. The result was that other parties either affiliated themselves with Santos or chose to withhold their support altogether. While the final decision rested in the hands of the voters themselves, Mockus only slightly improved his numbers in the runoff (he had about 22 percent May 30th).
Security during elections has always been problematic in Colombia. Despite the massive deployment of police and military, several incidents marred the day. In the state of Norte de Santander, seven police officers were killed in an ambush near the town of Tibu. The ELN rebel group that operates in that region is suspected of having perpetrated the attack. In the state of Meta, three Colombian armed forces soldiers were also killed in combat operations against FARC rebels.
President Santos will be sworn-in August seventh, and faces many challenges in this country, where poverty still affects almost half the population and rebel groups still roam large tracts of the national territory. Colombians voted for the continuation of the Democratic Security program started by outgoing president Alvaro Uribe eight years ago, which brought the country back from the brink of being a failed state to a nation with high investment potential for its stability and strong economic growth.
Colombia Election Results: No Surprise but Big Surprise
0Colombians voted today and as expected, no presidential candidate achieved fifty percent plus one, thereby triggering a second round of voting June 20. What was totally unexpected was the way in which the vote was split: the U candidate, Juan Manuel Santos, took the lion’s share with over 46 percent, while the Green party’s Antanas Mockus was a distant second with less than 22 percent, contradicting recent opinion polls that had shown in a dead heat with the Santos. Santos won the vote broadly, leading in every province (departamento) except Putumayo, where Mockus came out on top.
Another surprise is that the Cambio Radical’s Germán Vargas finished third, with just over ten percent, and the Polo Democratico’s Gustavo Petro ended in fourth place with about nine percent. Conservative Noemi Sanin placed fifth with 6 percent, despite having placed consistently third in pre-election polls. The liberal party’s Rafael Pardo garnered less than five percent of the national vote, thereby depriving him of state’s campaign cost subsidy which the top five candidates will enjoy.
Only the top finishers, Santos and Mockus, will be on the ballot in the second round, while the others can now only act as kingmakers, pledging their voter base to one of the two, although in the end, voters might not follow their candidate’s choice. A Santos second round win is almost guaranteed, needing only an additional four percent, while Mockus would have to add almost 29 percent, an almost impossible feat. Any offer Mockus will make to the other parties will sound hollow, while any candidate who walks across the line to the Santos camp is guaranteed real power sharing. Mockus didn’t help his cause by loudly rejecting Gustavo Petro’s offer of a second round alliance prior to the election, despite the fact that the Polo party was the surest bet to align with him. The second round looks to be a simple formality, only serving to reaffirm Santos’ resounding win.
What caused the Mockus support to collapse? Perhaps it was the sum of his many imprudent statements made to the press, including his promise to raise taxes to pay for social programs, made just last week and after the last opinion poll. Perhaps cool heads prevailed today, many Colombians thinking twice about putting an eccentric idealist at the helm of a country still immersed in a bloody battle with terrorists and drug traffickers, preferring to continue with the party that has allowed them to enjoy an unprecedented level of security, letting them continue with their Democratic Security program. It’s not a coincidence that all candidates promised to continue Democratic Security, but in the final analysis, who can best run the program except those who started it, Santos having been an important player in his role as defense minister under outgoing president Alvaro Uribe?
Perhaps the most telling evidence on the effectiveness of the U party’s relentless war on illegal armed groups is that today’s election unfurled without incident, Colombians turning-out to vote in record numbers. No explosions, kidnappings or shootings as in past elections, although the police did detect and disarm a few bombs. The electoral registrar’s system performed flawlessly this time, ballot counts rolling in quickly, with almost all reporting within two hours after polls closed at four pm local time, unlike the recent congressional and senatorial elections which took days to tally and were marred by controversy.
* Election results from the Registradura Nacional de Colombia
James Carville is Santos’ Top Campaign Advisor
1A little known fact here is that James Carville, the American political consultant and media personality credited with helping Bill Clinton get elected, is the top advisor for the front runner in Colombia’s ongoing presidential campaign, Juan Manuel Santos. His help does not come cheaply and hints at the seriousness behind Santos’ bid to replace outgoing President and mentor Alvaro Uribe. I have no idea if Carville offered his services, or Santos’ people sought him out, or if Washington sent him to insure that “their man” wins, but I do know Carville’s input has been instrumental to many in shaping their political careers, including the UK’s Tony Blair.




