Colombian Senate summons ministers to scrutinize Petro's economic emergency decree

Following President Gustavo Petro's declaration of a 30-day economic and social emergency, Colombia's Senate has approved summoning all ministers to a political control debate on December 29. The hybrid session, set amid legislative recess, aims to examine the fiscal crisis and the decree's implications after Congress rejected tax reforms.

In a continuation of tensions over Colombia's fiscal challenges, the Senate of the Republic held an extraordinary virtual session on December 26, 2025—during the year-end legislative recess—to approve a summons for all ministers to attend a political control debate. Proposed by Senator Carlos Fernando Motoa (Cambio Radical), the session is scheduled for Sunday, December 29, at 10:00 a.m. in hybrid format.

This follows President Gustavo Petro's Decree 1390 of December 24, which declared the emergency to address a $16.3 trillion budget deficit after Congress sank financing bills. The debate will scrutinize the decree's necessity and the fallout from failed tax reforms.

The proposal received broad bipartisan support, including from Conservative, Centro Democrático, and even Pacto Histórico's Senator Isabel Cristina Zuleta, who noted it would clarify the fiscal situation and revenue shortfalls. Motoa emphasized: “Political control has no recess. It is a permanent constitutional function,” criticizing the normalization of emergencies amid legislative gridlock.

Senator Efraín Cepeda questioned the decree's basis, arguing no unforeseen events justified it. Senate President Lidio García Turbay defended legislative independence, countering Interior Minister Armando Benedetti's claims by citing Article 215 of the Constitution for extraordinary sessions.

Government figures, like Labor Minister Antonio Sanguino, criticized the summons' haste and García's role. These exchanges underscore deepening Executive-Legislative clashes, with implications for the decree's review by the Constitutional Court in January 2026.

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Dramatic illustration depicting Colombia's Constitutional Court suspending an economic emergency decree, with President Petro criticizing the ruling amid economic turmoil symbols.
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Constitutional court provisionally suspends economic emergency decree

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Colombia's Constitutional Court provisionally suspended Decree 1390 of December 22, 2025, which declared an Economic and Social Emergency. President Gustavo Petro criticized the decision as a rupture of the constitutional order and stated that the cost of the debt will not fall on the working class. The government plans to present new tax laws to address the deficit.

President Gustavo Petro signed Decree 1390 of 2025 declaring a 30-day economic and social emergency in Colombia after the Congress sank the financing bill. The measure aims to raise funds to cover a $16.3 trillion deficit and ensure essential services like health. The announcement sparks legal and political debate, with reviews pending from the Constitutional Court and Congress.

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The Constitutional Court suspended President Gustavo Petro's economic emergency decree from December 2025, an unprecedented move halting measures like a tax reform by decree. Huila representatives in Congress voiced divided opinions on the fiscal, legal, and political ramifications of this ruling. Some hail it as a check on an unconstitutional 'decree blitz,' while others decry the constraints on tackling the economic crisis.

Colombia's Finance Minister Germán Ávila defended the Economic and Social Emergency, stating that without it the state couldn't meet fundamental obligations. He assured that the measures won't affect the family basket or vulnerable sectors. Funds will go toward health, security, and key subsidies.

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The Colombian government issued legislative decree 0044 on January 21, 2026, to ensure the continuity of electricity services amid an imminent crisis. The exceptional measures aim to bolster sector liquidity without impacting users or tariffs. Mines and Energy Minister Edwin Palma stressed the goal of preventing widespread blackouts in vulnerable areas like the Caribbean.

Following legislative elections, Argentina's officialism warned the opposition it will veto the 2026 Budget if it fails to ensure fiscal balance. Chamber of Deputies President Martín Menem stressed the need for rationality to avoid political chaos. The government aims to delay the debate until new legislators take office on December 10.

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Following the December 19 announcement of plans for an economic emergency decree, the Colombian government of Gustavo Petro on December 31 issued the tax package via Decree 1390, targeting 11 trillion pesos to address a 16.3 trillion fiscal deficit after Congress rejected reforms. Finance Minister Germán Ávila noted it covers much but not all 2026 needs, impacting liquor, cigarettes, patrimony, finance, and imports.

 

 

 

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