Ahead of Colombia's elections, 'Latin America overall is going to the right'
In the lead-up to Colombia's presidential elections, Franรงois Picard is pleased to welcome Renata Segura, Program Director for Latin America and the Caribbean at the International Crisis Group. "What
In the lead-up to Colombia's presidential elections, Franรงois Picard is pleased to welcome Renata Segura, Program Director for Latin America and the C
Read Full Story at France 24 โThe looming presidential contest in Colombia arrives at a pivotal moment for Latin America, where a discernible rightward lurch is reshaping the regionโs political landscape. Beyond the immediate stakes of Colombiaโs electionโpotentially the first conservative victory since รlvaro Uribeโs departureโthis shift reflects broader currents: voter fatigue with progressive experiments, economic discontent tied to inflation and slow growth, and a backlash against crime and corruption that has eroded faith in left-leaning governance. The outcome may not just redefine Colombiaโs trajectory but also signal whether this conservative wave has staying power or if it will be tempered by pragmatic demands for stability over ideological purity. Colombiaโs political identity has long been shaped by its brutal conflict, the 2016 peace accord, and a fragile balance between rural reform and urban conservatism. Yet the current campaign reveals a country wrestling with the same pressures facing neighbors like Chile, Argentina, and Ecuadorโrising crime, uneven post-pandemic recovery, and a middle class skeptical of redistributive policies. This is not merely a regional mood swing but part of a cyclical pattern in Latin America, where voters often oscillate between left and right in response to perceived governance failures. What makes this moment distinct is the depth of disillusionment: even countries that once saw leftist victories as a regional domino effect, like Bolivia or Peru, now face conservative resurgences or political fragmentation. Looking ahead, the key question is whether this rightward turn will consolidate into durable governance or remain a corrective phase. If economic conditions worsen or security deteriorates, voters may blame incumbents regardless of ideology. Alternatively, a right-wing victory in Colombia could embolden similar forces elsewhere, creating a domino effect in 2024โs electoral cycle. Yet history suggests that ideological swings rarely last without tangible resultsโwhether that means reduced violence, job growth, or curbed corruption. For now, the regionโs rightward drift feels less like a triumph of ideology than a demand for competence, a signal that Latin Americaโs political pendulum is swinging toward pragmatism, for better or worse.
