Huila politicians state positions on presidential consultations

Next Sunday, alongside congressional elections in Colombia, voters can participate in three consultations to select presidential precandidates. Politicians from Huila have shared their preferences for these consultations amid controversies stirred by President Gustavo Petro and his party. Several local figures back candidates like Paloma Valencia and Roy Barreras, while others choose to abstain.

On March 8, 2026, Colombians will vote in congressional elections and, optionally, in three presidential consultations: the Consulta de las Soluciones (center), focused on health, security, and education; La Gran Consulta Por Colombia (center-right); and the Frente por la Vida (left). These consultations, on a single ballot, select one winner each, who will compete on May 31 against aspirants like Iván Cepeda, Abelardo de la Espriella, and Sergio Fajardo. If no majority, a second round follows three weeks later. Voters must select only one consultation and mark their preferred candidate's box.

The Consulta de las Soluciones features Claudia López and Leonardo Humberto Huerta Gutiérrez. La Gran Consulta Por Colombia has nine aspirants: Mauricio Cárdenas, David Luna, Victoria Dávila, Juan Manuel Galán, Paloma Valencia, Juan Carlos Pinzón, Aníbal Gaviria, Enrique Peñalosa, and Juan Daniel Oviedo. The Frente por la Vida includes Héctor Elías Pineda, Edison Lucio Torres, Roy Barreras, Martha Bernal, and Daniel Quintero.

Huila politicians have stated their positions. Garzón councilor Manuel Cerquera and Neiva's Mauricio Rojas back Paloma Valencia from Centro Democrático, praising her public administration knowledge and firmness against corruption. Several support Roy Barreras: Neiva councilors Roberto Escobar, Juan Sebastián Prieto Pérez, Juan Carlos Parada, and Juan Pablo Perdomo Zambrano, plus deputy Victoria Castro. Prieto Pérez stressed: “Colombia needs balance, sanity, and governability, not polarization”. Perdomo Zambrano added: “Colombia requires reconciliation, a person who works for all”.

Neiva councilor Héctor Javier Osorio supports Juan Manuel Galán, aligned with Nuevo Liberalismo. However, figures like deputy Rodrigo Lara Sánchez, close to Sergio Fajardo, and representative Leyla Rincón from Pacto Histórico will not vote in the consultations. Rincón stated: “Pacto Histórico will vote on May 31 for Iván Cepeda”. Similarly, councilors César Oviedo and Alejandro Serna will abstain, following party guidelines. Pacto Histórico, aligned with Petro, is not participating and urges abstention.

In Huila, voting stations remain unchanged, with polls opening at 8:00 a.m. Local stats include 43 candidates for the departmental Cámara circumscription, six closed lists, six open lists, and 16 Senate lists.

مقالات ذات صلة

Realistic scene of a crowded Colombian polling station on election day, with voters, ballots, poll screens, and corruption-themed headlines evoking tension ahead of March 8 legislative polls.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Polls, corruption concerns mount ahead of Colombia's March 8 legislative elections

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

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.

Six Colombian presidential hopefuls formed the La Gran Consulta por Colombia alliance, agreeing to a popular consultation on March 8, 2026, to select a single candidate for the 2026 elections.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

The Defensoría del Pueblo warns of social conflict risks in 12 departments, including Huila, due to political polarization ahead of the March 8, 2026, congressional elections. Analysts attribute tensions to divisions between left and right, worsened by insecurity. Senate candidate María Lucía Villalba urges Huilenses to vote to retain direct Senate representation.

Presidential candidate Luis Gilberto Murillo, in an interview with LA NACIÓN, stressed the need to recover territories affected by illegal armed groups through a mix of authority and opportunities. From Andagoya in Chocó, Murillo criticized the Total Peace policy and advocated strengthening public forces with modern technology. He outlined proposals for an opportunity-driven Colombia, focusing on security, infrastructure, and state modernization.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

The National Electoral Council (CNE) revoked the Historic Pact's registration for the House of Representatives in Valle del Cauca, due to exceeding the vote percentage limit for alliances. This ruling creates uncertainty ahead of the March 8 legislative elections in a key leftist stronghold. The Pact intends to challenge the decision through legal means.

The registration of a promoter committee for a national constituent assembly with the Registraduría has reignited a debate Colombia thought settled. Pushed by President Gustavo Petro's government, the initiative aims to alter institutional rules despite prior pledges to uphold the 1991 Constitution. Critics warn it could enable presidential re-election and undermine democracy.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

The National Government's Delegation in Buenaventura has asked illegal armed groups not to interfere in the March 8 legislative elections. The call targets bands such as Los Shottas, Los Espartanos, and Los Chiquillos, as part of the Paz Urbana policy. The aim is to ensure a peaceful voting day for the port's residents.

 

 

 

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