When Colombians return to the polls on June 21, they will be deciding far more than who will become their country’s next president. The runoff election between Iván Cepeda of the left-wing Pacto Histórico coalition and Abelardo de la Espriella of the conservative Salvación Nacional movement represents much more than a routine transfer of power. At stake is the direction one of Latin America’s most influential nations will take at a time when democracies around the world are facing mounting pressure. The issues dominating Colombia’s campaign sound remarkably familiar to Americans. Political polarization, public security, migration, economic inequality, disinformation, judicial independence, and confidence in democratic institutions have become defining challenges not only in Colombia but throughout the Western Hemisphere.
Many observers see Colombia’s election as a preview of where democracies across the Americas may be headed. Over the past several years, Latin America has experienced a series of political upheavals. Brazil elected Jair Bolsonaro, Argentina turned to Javier Milei, Mexico chose Claudia Sheinbaum, Chile elected Gabriel Boric, Ecuador brought Daniel Noboa to power, while Peru has cycled through successive political crises. Together, these developments suggest that traditional party systems have weakened as societies have become increasingly polarized. Colombia now stands at one of the most consequential moments in that broader regional transformation.
For more than six decades, Colombia’s history has been shaped by armed conflict, guerrilla warfare, drug cartels, paramilitary organizations, and political violence. The 2016 peace agreement with the FARC guerrilla movement marked a historic turning point, yet its implementation has remained deeply contested. Armed groups continue to control parts of the country, while former guerrillas, human rights advocates, journalists, and community leaders continue to be targeted and killed. In many regions, peace remains more of a promise than a reality.
That is precisely why one of the central questions of this election is whether Colombia will continue implementing the peace accords or return to a strategy centered primarily on military solutions. Iván Cepeda has spent decades as one of Colombia’s most prominent human rights advocates. As a senator, he has consistently defended the implementation of the peace agreement while participating in numerous investigations into political violence and abuses committed by state actors. His supporters argue that Colombia cannot escape its cycle of violence without addressing social inequality, land ownership, and persistent rural poverty.
Abelardo de la Espriella offers a sharply different vision. His campaign has focused on strengthening public security, restoring order, and taking a tougher approach toward organized crime. He argues that left-wing governments have been overly lenient toward armed groups, allowing insecurity to worsen. His supporters believe Colombia now needs a stronger state and more decisive leadership.
Speaking during an American Community Media briefing, Stanford University political scientist Beatriz Magaloni argued that Latin America’s greatest challenge today is no longer simply whether left- or right-wing governments hold power. The more fundamental problem, she said, is that citizens are steadily losing confidence in democratic institutions themselves. Magaloni’s research has long examined the relationship between poverty, violence, and weak state institutions. As co-director of Stanford’s Democracy Action Lab, she has repeatedly emphasized that when people no longer believe the state can protect them, they become increasingly willing to embrace political leaders who promise simple solutions to complex problems. Such promises, however, often come at the expense of democratic checks and balances.
Colombia is especially vulnerable in this regard. Land ownership remains extraordinarily unequal, and many of the country’s long-running conflicts continue to revolve around disputes over land. Millions of Colombians have been displaced over the decades, while large landowners and illegal economic networks continue to wield enormous influence. Land reform is therefore not merely an economic issue but one of the central tests of Colombian democracy itself.
Alex Sierra, an anthropologist with the Centro de Estudios Sociojurídicos Latinoamericanos (CESJUL), argues that the election is about far more than who governs from Bogotá. The real question, he says, is whether rural communities will finally be treated as full citizens. His research shows that in many parts of Colombia, residents interact more frequently with paramilitary organizations and armed groups than with legitimate state institutions. Democracy, he argues, cannot truly exist until the state’s presence is represented not primarily by soldiers but by schools, healthcare, functioning courts, and effective local government.
The election also carries significant implications for the United States. For decades, Washington has been Colombia’s closest strategic partner in the fight against drug trafficking. Through Plan Colombia, the United States invested billions of dollars in military and law enforcement assistance. Although the partnership significantly weakened the major drug cartels, it also contributed to the militarization of the conflict while numerous human rights violations occurred.
In recent years, new challenges have emerged. Venezuela’s political and economic collapse has driven more than 2.5 million Venezuelan refugees into Colombia, creating one of the largest humanitarian crises in the country’s history. Migration has therefore become not only an American domestic issue but one of Latin America’s defining political questions. Colombia’s experience illustrates how difficult it is to remain both humane and effective when confronting migration on such an enormous scale.










