Petro-linked committee presents Constituent Assembly bill targeting Banco de la República

Following the December 27 registration of a promoter committee, President Gustavo Petro's government has presented a bill for a National Constituent Assembly. It proposes reviewing Colombia's economic model, boosting state roles in key sectors, and adjusting the Banco de la República's mandate to support growth and jobs while preserving autonomy.

The Committee for Promoting the Call to a National Constituent Assembly—registered last week with Colombia's National Registry—presented a bill to reshape the country's economic framework. The proposal seeks to replace the rent-seeking, extractive model with mixed economies, emphasizing state participation in strategic sectors for mass employment and prohibiting labor subcontracting.

Key is a review of the Banco de la República's operations. While the Constitution currently tasks the central bank with maintaining currency purchasing power alongside general economic policy, the bill advocates adding constitutional mandates for sustainable growth and job creation, without eroding technical independence. It also urges reforms to state institutions prioritizing welfare, rights, and energy transition over pure market reliance, while bolstering public essential services.

Framed amid national reconciliation for over 10 million conflict victims, sovereignty defense, and Latin American integration, the initiative positions the assembly as addressing unfulfilled democratic pledges from an era resembling the pre-1991 institutional constraints.

مقالات ذات صلة

Colombian business leaders protesting outside the Constitutional Court, petitioning to block the government's economic emergency decree amid stability concerns.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Business groups petition Constitutional Court to block Colombia's economic emergency decree

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Following Finance Minister Germán Ávila's announcement of an economic emergency to raise 16 trillion pesos for the 2026 budget, major Colombian business associations including Fenalco, Andi, and the National Business Council have urged the Constitutional Court to review and potentially suspend the measure, arguing it fails constitutional tests amid concerns over economic stability.

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

In response to ongoing debates sparked by the recent registration of a promoter committee, President Gustavo Petro has reiterated he does not seek re-election—prohibited by Colombia's Constitution—and remains open to a civil society-driven Constituent Assembly to advance stalled social reforms.

Colombia's President Gustavo Petro voted this Sunday in Plaza de Bolívar, deviating from his usual polling place. He urged Colombians to participate consciously in the legislative elections. He emphasized selecting representatives dedicated to the general interest.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

President Gustavo Petro pushes for repatriating about 250 trillion pesos invested abroad by pension funds, criticizing the economic model since the 1990s. The proposal has reignited debates with figures like Enrique Peñalosa and raised technical warnings from experts like Mónica Higuera. Petro argues that workers' savings should create local jobs rather than benefiting foreign economies.

President José Antonio Kast's government has delayed entry of its controversial 'National Reconstruction Plan'—recently renamed the 'economic reactivation reform'—into Congress until next week. Initially announced in March with an expected April 1 entry, the postponement allows final reviews and shifts focus to school security following a deadly incident in Calama.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Colombia's Senate Seventh Commission archived the health reform bill with eight votes in favor and five against, on the last day of the ordinary legislative session. This marks the second sinking of the initiative pushed by President Gustavo Petro's government. Reactions highlight concerns over the system's financial sustainability.

 

 

 

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