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Colombian right-wing presidential hopeful leads poll for runoff vote

By Thomson Reuters May 23, 2026 | 12:58 PM

By Luis Jaime Acosta

BOGOTA, May 23 (Reuters) – Right-wing candidate Abelardo De La Espriella received a surge in voter support in the final week leading up to the first round of Colombia’s presidential election, ​nearly tying with leftist Ivan Cepeda, whom the latest poll predicts ‌he would defeat in a runoff.

An AtlasIntel poll released on Saturday, the last to be issued before the May 31 vote, put Cepeda – the ruling party’s candidate – in the lead with 38.7% of the vote, followed by businessman De La Espriella with 37.3%.

However, the ‌poll ​estimated that in a potential runoff vote between the ⁠two, De La Espriella ⁠would receive 50% of the vote and Cepeda just 41.3%.

The survey was based on 4,531 interviews conducted between May 18 and 21. With one week to go until the election, De La Espriella surged by 4 ​percentage points from AtlasIntel’s last poll, while Cepeda gained 1 percentage point.

Paloma Valencia, of the right-wing Centro Democratico Party, trailed with 14.3% of voter intention, ⁠down by just over 2 percentage points. ⁠The poll predicted she would nevertheless beat Cepeda in a ​runoff with 44.6% to 41.5%.

CONTRASTING VISIONS FOR COLOMBIA

Cepeda has pledged to continue the ​path set by current President Gustavo Petro, Colombia’s first-ever leftist president, ‌by deepening social reforms to reduce inequality and pursuing peace talks with illegal armed groups.

De La Espriella has vowed to end negotiations and take a tough stance on crime and drug trafficking, offer incentives for private investors and ⁠entrepreneurs and boost the country’s mining and energy sectors.

Valencia promised to expand the size of the armed forces and national police, launch an offensive against criminal gangs ⁠and guerrillas, promote businesses ‌and cut taxes.

The opposition’s campaign promises would mark an about-turn ⁠from the current administration of Petro, a former M19 ​rebel ‌who stopped granting new oil and gas exploration contracts ​in a bid ⁠to move the country toward more sustainable energy sources.

His four-year term ends in August. If no candidate wins more than half the valid votes of the 41 million-strong electorate, a runoff between the two top candidates will be held on June 21.

(Reporting by Luis Jaime Acosta in Bogota; Writing by Sarah Morland; ​Editing by Matthew Lewis)