Jhon Amaya presents vision for a greater Colombia in senate candidacy

In an interview with the LA NACIÓN newspaper, senate candidate from Boyacá, Jhon Amaya, outlined his proposals centered on five main causes to transform the country from Congress. A native of Socha with experience in technology and open government, Amaya emphasizes education, technology, and decentralization as pillars to break poverty cycles and empower regions. He invited Huila residents to support him on March 8 in the Alianza Verde coalition.

Jhon Amaya, an electronics engineer from Boyacá born in Socha, is running for Senate with a proposal he calls 'the Greater Colombia.' In an interview with LA NACIÓN published on February 7, 2026, Amaya, a public university graduate with a master's in Information Technologies, shared his background: he served as secretary of TIC and Open Government in Boyacá, subdirector of Digital Innovation at the Colombia en Paz Fund, and advisor on communications in the Sixth Commission of Congress.

His five main causes are: first, education as a catalyst to break poverty, advocating access to basic, secondary, and higher education; second, 'TIC justice' to bring innovation to remote areas and close gaps; third, full citizenship with health, security, and a healthy environment; fourth, good living in the countryside through productive agroindustry and tertiary roads; fifth, decentralization so regions lead transformations without relying on Bogotá.

Amaya credits positive changes in Boyacá over 15 years to service-oriented politics: 'We have demonstrated that politics, when done with the purpose of serving, transforms.' The department is now one of the most educated and secure, with tourism as a main economic driver.

For Huila, he proposes strengthening health, employability, and tourism, allying with Diana Monje (House candidate) and Luz Pastrana (representative). He advocates for an AI regulation law and support for microenterprises against informality. 'If traditional politics representatives have managed to transform the territories, keep trusting them. But if not, we ask for a chance to a project with proven results,' he said. He invites voting on March 8 by marking 5 on the Alianza Verde ballot.

Articoli correlati

Realistic illustration of a heated candidates' debate at Universidad de San Buenaventura for Colombia's 2026 legislative elections, emphasizing voter engagement and political visions.
Immagine generata dall'IA

Debates highlight congress role in 2026 elections

Riportato dall'IA Immagine generata dall'IA

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.

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.

Riportato dall'IA

Senate candidate for the MIRA party, Ana Paola Agudelo, closed her campaign at Santander Park in Neiva, Huila, before over 2,000 sympathizers. In her speech, she defended her legislative trajectory and the party's principles, highlighting no corruption records in over two decades. She expressed satisfaction with the citizen support received during the departmental tour.

Presidential hopeful Mauricio Lizcano filed 1,839,930 signatures with the National Registry to formalize his bid for the 2026 elections. Representing the Colombianismo movement, Lizcano stressed a focus on decency and efficiency in governance. His campaign draws from direct consultations with citizens across various regions of the country.

Riportato dall'IA

Valle del Cauca earned first place in Colombia Líder's National Education Challenge, in the category for special departments 1 and 2. The award recognizes initiatives in pedagogical innovation and rural entrepreneurship. Governor Dilian Francisca Toro hailed the achievement as a collective effort by students and teachers.

A national poll indicates that 66% of Colombians will surely vote in the March 8 legislative elections. The Pacto Histórico leads congressional preferences with 23%, followed by the Centro Democrático with 15%. In the presidential race, Iván Cepeda tops with 30% voter intention.

Riportato dall'IA

Former Justice Minister Wilson Ruiz Orejuela announced his Senate candidacy with the Salvación Nacional party and his support for presidential precandidate Abelardo De la Espriella. Ruiz, who has criticized Colombia's institutional crisis, stresses the need to unite the right to defend democracy and institutions. His decision stems from a diagnosis of eroding trust in the state under the current government.

 

 

 

Questo sito web utilizza i cookie

Utilizziamo i cookie per l'analisi per migliorare il nostro sito. Leggi la nostra politica sulla privacy per ulteriori informazioni.
Rifiuta