Just days before Colombia's March 8, 2026, legislative elections for 102 senators and 188 House representatives—plus three inter-party presidential consultations—polls highlight frontrunners amid corruption scandals and fragmentation. With over 3,000 candidates, informed voting is crucial to combat polarization and abstention.
Building on earlier coverage of the 2026 electoral kickoff with over 3,100 registered candidates, recent developments underscore intensifying dynamics. Polls for inter-party consultations show Paloma Valencia leading the Gran Consulta por Colombia at 23% (GAC3 survey for RCN Televisión and La República), though Vicky Dávila boasts 7.28 million social media followers vs. Enrique Peñalosa's 2.33 million. Claudia López dominates Consulta de las Soluciones with 5.18 million followers against Leonardo Huerta's 35,971, while Daniel Quintero leads Frente por la Vida digitally with 2.72 million ahead of Roy Barreras's 1.25 million.
Corruption shadows several lists, including Barreras's with Gorky Muñoz, sanctioned for ten years over alleged embezzlement in Neiva. Key Senate hopefuls include Carolina Corcho (Pacto Histórico), Andrés Forero (Centro Democrático), and Carlos Fernando Motoa (Cambio Radical). Analysts project around 20 seats for Pacto Histórico and 16 for Centro Democrático amid fragmentation.
Consultation rules under Law 1475 of 2011 bind losers to back winners until the presidential first round, enforceable by the National Electoral Council. Vote-buying persists in areas like Córdoba and La Guajira, with seizures tied to figures such as Jaime Luis Lacouture. Experts stress conscious participation to counter over 50% historical abstention and ensure democratic balance.