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Votes : 3201
 

Colombian Presidential Elections Primer

May 26th is the second day this year that the Colombian electorate will turn to the urns to see if things will take a turn for the better. Hopes are high and people are ready for a change, which is shown by the results in favor of independent candidates in March's congressional elections, despite the decries of strange happenings, which have not yet been resolved and there appears to be very little interest on the part of the Congress to fix the matter, as was seen in Noemí Sanín's recent appearance in Congress to a mostly empty auditorium.

The Candidates
The following list, except for the web addresses and comments, with their ballot number appeared in El Tiempo. Have a look for yourself. You can see more comments on Electorales.com.
Luis Eduardo Garzón
Luis Eduardo Garzón(Presidencia) y Vera Grabe (Vicepresidencia) por el Frente Social y Político (Número 1).
www.LuchoGarzon.com
"Lucho" is a union leader, former President of CUT, Colombia's largest union organization. He is not in favor of using force to save the country from terrorism and disagrees with extradition to the U.S.
Noemí Sanín
Noemí Sanín (Presidencia) y Fabio Villegas (Vicepresidencia) por Sí Colombia (Número 2).
www.NoemiSanin.net
Sanín boasts of having the best presidential platform and has been applauded for getting together one of the best groups of advisors, which is said to be strong in economic issues. Promises to rid the Congress of corruption.
Harold Bedoya
Harold Bedoya (Presidencia) y Marino Jaramillo (Vicepresidencia) por Fuerza Colombia (Número 3).
www.FuerzaColombia.org
Álvaro Uribe Vélez
Álvaro Uribe Vélez (Presidencia) y Francisco Santos (Vicepresidencia) por Primero Colombia (Número 4).
www.AlvaroUribeVelez.com.co
Slogan: "Hard hand, big heart" Uribe promises to cut the number of Congresspeople in half and cut government spending way down.
Francisco Tovar
Francisco Tovar (Presidencia) y Ricardo Díaz (Vicepresidencia) por Fuerza Ciudadana (Número 5).
Guillermo Cardona
Guillermo Cardona (Presidencia) y Leonardo Cuervo (Vicepresidencia) por el movimiento Comunal y Comunitario (Número 6).
www.GCardona.com
Cardona works from a grassroots foundation.
Augusto Lora
Augusto Lora (Presidencia) y Germán Rojas (Vicepresidencia) por el movimiento Alianza Democrática M-19 (Número 7).
M-19, or Movimiento 19 de abril, was the urban-based guerrilla group that took the Palacio de Justicia and the Dominican Embassy during an Ambassador party.
Horacio Serpa
Horacio Serpa (Presidencia) y José Gregorio Hernández (Vicepresidencia) por el Partido Liberal (Número 8).
www.Serpa2002.com
Liberal Party candidate.
Álvaro Cristancho Toscano
Álvaro Cristancho Toscano (Presidencia) por el Movimiento de Participación Comunitaria (Número 9).
Íngrid Betancourt
Íngrid Betancourt (Presidencia) y Clara Rojas (Vicepresidencia) por el Partido Verde Oxígeno (Número 10).
www.IngridBetancourt.com
Pushed for a referendum that was never followed through on with Pastrana to close the corrupt Congress.
Rodolfo Rincón Sosa
Rodolfo Rincón Sosa (Presidencia) y Donaldo Jinete Escorcia (Vicepresidencia) Movimiento de Participación Comunitaria (Número 11).
No Electoral College
The Colombian elections are based on a popular vote in which the military is not allowed to participate, except for attempting to keep the peace throughout the electoral process. If there is no candidate with at least a 50% vote count, the top two candidates go to a second-round to determine who will become president.
The polls
The numbers still show Alvaro Uribe Vélez in a commanding lead, but not enough to win in the first-round. Take a look at this article from El Tiempo about the polls.
"The least of the evils" again
Not everybody jumping on the Uribe bandwagon is in favor of the "hard hand" part of his proposed measures. What many people don't want is more of the same old stuff in Serpa and his old school ways. So, folks are looking to one candidate to keep another out of office. Sound familiar?
No strings attached
One thing apparent in the recent mayoral, congressional and presidential elections is that Colombians are tired of the "strings-attached" kind of politicking in Colombia. It is apparent at the urns and very apparent through candidates' vehement assurance of their independent candidacies.
Created by bill
Last modified 2002-09-11 02:45 PM
 

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