Leftist Cepeda concedes razor-thin defeat to ultrarightist De la Espriella in Colombias closest presidential election

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22 days · 11 summary articles
Colombia’s leftist presidential candidate Iván Cepeda conceded defeat on Wednesday, accepting the razor-thin victory of ultrarightist Abelardo de la Espriella in the country’s most closely contested election in history. Speaking in Bogotá, Cepeda announced that he would recognise the official result, which gave De la Espriella 12.9 million votes (49.78%) to his 12.8 million (48.7%), a margin of less than one percentage point.
“As candidate of the Pacto Histórico and the Alianza por la Vida, I have decided to accept the result that emerges from this process and that declares Abelardo de la Espriella the new president of the Republic,” Cepeda told reporters. He framed his concession as an act of democratic responsibility, pledging to contribute to peace, dialogue and national coexistence. “We believe deeply in democracy and are convinced that political differences must be resolved through citizen participation, respect for institutions and public deliberation,” he said .
The Registraduría Nacional declared the result irreversible on Sunday with 99.58% of polling stations reporting, yet Cepeda had initially vowed to challenge tallies from more than 33,000 voting tables amid allegations of irregularities. By Wednesday, however, he acknowledged that the electoral authority’s scrutiny was virtually complete and thanked thousands of party witnesses, lawyers and observers for their vigilance.
Despite accepting the outcome, Cepeda warned that his coalition would maintain strict oversight of the incoming government. “We will defend democracy with all our moral and political energy,” he declared, vowing to resist any curtailment of public freedoms, stigmatisation of social movements or treatment of organised youth as “internal enemies.” He also pledged to oppose misogynistic, homophobic conduct by the president and any restrictions on free expression or opinion.
International outlets described De la Espriella’s triumph as a seismic shift for Colombia. The Financial Times characterised him as a firebrand seeking to emulate Argentina’s Javier Milei and El Salvador’s Nayib Bukele, promising sweeping state cuts and the construction of mega-prisons in the Amazon . French daily Le Monde noted that the runoff produced the narrowest presidential margin in Colombian history and followed days of tension between protesters and security forces .
Markets reacted positively to De la Espriella’s victory, but economists cautioned that his agenda—including deep state reductions, expanded fracking and a tough security crackdown—could carry hidden costs . Meanwhile, Cepeda’s concession removes lingering uncertainty over the election’s legitimacy and sets the stage for a period of intense political oversight from the opposition.
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