Realistic illustration of a heated candidates' debate at Universidad de San Buenaventura for Colombia's 2026 legislative elections, emphasizing voter engagement and political visions.
Realistic illustration of a heated candidates' debate at Universidad de San Buenaventura for Colombia's 2026 legislative elections, emphasizing voter engagement and political visions.
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Debates highlight congress role in 2026 elections

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Less than a month before Colombia's 2026 legislative elections, debates like the one at Universidad de San Buenaventura emphasize deeply understanding candidates and their visions. With 3,144 registered aspirants, experts urge fighting abstention and bolstering power balance. Opinions suggest post-election alliances for the presidency.

The second debate in the 2026 elections cycle, held at Universidad de San Buenaventura, made clear that isolated promises are insufficient; a deep understanding of candidates, their proposals, and visions for the country and region is needed, according to columnist Rosa María Agudelo. Topics like infrastructure, investment, and education were central, but the development model is decisive.

In a presidential system, Congress serves as a check against unilateral executive decisions. The last four years showed a lack of governability, with reforms by decree and policies without broad consensus, leading to repeated judicial interventions to review constitutionality, Agudelo notes. This tension harms democracy, and the legislative elections are key to representing Colombia's political, social, and regional diversity.

An Occidente editorial points out that 3,144 candidates registered for the 2026 Congress elections to the Senate and House of Representatives, providing wide ideological, geographical, and social options. In 2022, participation was only 45.87%, with over half of the electoral census abstaining, reflecting disinterest and a failure of citizen co-responsibility. Voters are urged to learn about backgrounds, proposals on education, security, economy, and fundamental rights.

Columnist Gustavo Álvarez Gardeazábal suggests that parties like Liberal, Conservative, Cambio Radical, and La U, without defined presidential candidates, could form a bloc on March 9, one day after the March 8 congressional elections. He proposes Jaime Alberto Cabal, Fenalco president from Buga, as a potential single candidate, valued for his respectful criticism of the Petro government and salaried worker profile, opposing the Uribe-Petro polarization.

Voters must demand clear positions on the economic model, decentralization, and legal security, Agudelo concludes, to defend democracy through information and participation.

Cosa dice la gente

X discussions focus on announcements and live updates of the candidate debate at Universidad de San Buenaventura for Colombia's 2026 legislative elections. Media and university accounts promoted the event, listing candidates and covering topics like regional infrastructure, education funding, energy security, fiscal autonomy, and Buenaventura's development. Sentiments are neutral and promotional, urging democratic dialogue and informed voting to address abstention and power balance.

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

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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.

The year 2026 begins in Colombia with an electoral focus, ahead of congressional elections on March 8, the presidency on May 31, and a likely runoff on June 21. A total of 3,144 candidates have registered for legislative seats, according to electoral authority records. Analysts describe the outlook as confused and diffuse, emphasizing the need for clean campaigns to avoid commitments that foster corruption.

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After Colombia's March 2026 congressional elections, the presidential race candidacies have solidified, with Centro Democrático's Paloma Valencia—selected in December 2025—as the leading center-right contender against Abelardo de la Espriella and Iván Cepeda. The landscape features deep polarization, alliance-building needs, political violence, and debates over candidates' executive experience amid looming crises.

Following preparations for Colombia's March 8-9, 2026, legislative elections, voting for the Senate, House of Representatives, and interparty consultations proceeded smoothly in Huila with no security incidents, per the National Police. Polls opened in Neiva amid robust security, and initial results show several prominent candidates falling short of seats.

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Following the March 2026 congressional elections that solidified key candidacies, Colombia's National Civil Registry has drawn the order of 14 presidential candidates on the ballot for the May 31 first-round vote. Iván Cepeda leads in position 1, Abelardo de la Espriella in 5, and Paloma Valencia in 12.

The Chamber of Deputies began debating the labor reform on Thursday, February 19, 2026, achieving quorum with 130 lawmakers thanks to support from allied and provincial blocs. The ruling party defends updating 50-year-old regulations, while the opposition criticizes the loss of rights and questions the rushed process. Outside the chamber, protesters rallied against the bill, leading to clashes with police.

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Luis Guillermo Echeverri Vélez warns in La República that 81% abstention in the three punteros signals discontent and distrust. He stresses reaching lower strata with concrete messages on daily issues. He calls for mobilizing votes for freedom, highlighting Álvaro Uribe's role.

 

 

 

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