Colombia election race starts, Santos favoured

The Constitutional Court’s decision to bar a referendum on  re-election heralds an end to President Alvaro Uribe’s  eight-year rule, during which the US ally beat back left-wing  guerrillas, stabilized the economy and drew investors.

With Colombian politics fixated for more than a year on the  re-election issue, and polls showing Uribe would have won  easily if allowed to run, Friday’s ruling represented a  starting gun for other presidential aspirants.

“The campaign kicks off,” leading daily El Tiempo said.

“The happiest man in Colombia today is Juan Manuel Santos,”  said one of his rivals in the May 30 presidential election,  Gustavo Petro, of the leftist Democratic Pole party.

Uribe’s former defence minister — who also held the  finance portfolio in a previous government — is closely  associated with the US-backed security policies that have  made Uribe the nation’s most popular president, and helped  Colombia escape its past image for violence and chaos.

Before the presidential vote, a March 14 parliamentary  election will test the political waters, and a certain amount  of realigning among Uribe’s ruling coalition is expected.

Uribe backs Santos, who heads the president’s Social  National Unity Party. But Uribe’s alliance partner, the  Conservative Party, could put up its own candidate.

Sergio Fajardo, an independent candidate and former mayor  from Colombia’s second city Medellin, is hovering behind Santos  in the polls. And would-be Conservative Party candidate Noemi  Sanin could be a challenger if the Uribe alliance splits.

Santos met Uribe in the city of Cali yesterday to plan  their political strategy for the election.

“We are going to win,” Santos predicted. “I will find the  way for this great coalition to have a single candidate.”

Analysts expect no candidate will win more than 50 per cent  of the votes in May, meaning there would be a run-off in June.

Many hailed the court ruling as a sign of democratic  maturity.

“This shows to the international community the civilized  nature and respect for the law in this country,” said former  president, Ernesto Samper.

On the streets, where the Uribe re-election saga has  gripped Colombia’s 44 million people like a national soap  opera, reaction was mixed. Some said it was right for the  president to bow out, while others feared instability.

“It’s not a good thing because he was freeing us from the  guerrillas, and I’m afraid the next one may ease up on that,”  said Bogota housewife Amanda Bellos, 43.

Economists said the political transition could cause a  short-term wobble in the peso currency and local TES debt  markets. But they forecast long-term stability, with the next  leader likely to follow the conservative Uribe’s broad  policies, perhaps with more emphasis on social development.

Under Uribe, foreign money has poured back into Colombia, a  top coffee exporter and Latin America’s No. 4 oil exporter.

“We expect to witness some level of political noise until  the elections in late May (and a likely run-off in June) but do  not expect the presidential transition to bring about a major  change in the direction of investor-friendly macro and  financial policies,” said Goldman Sachs analyst Alberto Ramos.

While keeping up the fight against Latin America’s oldest  insurgency and Colombia’s money-spinning cocaine trade, the  next leader will have to shepherd the nation out of recession  and combat rising unemployment.

Washington’s envoy to Colombia, William Brownfield, said he  expected good ties with the future government in the fight on  cocaine trafficking and other ills. “We will keep collaborating  with this government and the future government,” he said.