HomeGeneral NewsColombia set for presidential runoff after leftist Cepeda acknowledges first round loss

Colombia set for presidential runoff after leftist Cepeda acknowledges first round loss

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By Luis Jaime Acosta

BOGOTA, ‌June 7 (Reuters) - Right-wing lawyer Abelardo De La Espriella will face ​left-wing candidate Ivan Cepeda on June 21 in a presidential runoff in Colombia, after Cepeda on Sunday ⁠belatedly acknowledged his defeat in the first round of voting.

De La Espriella of the Defenders of the Homeland movement,  who presents himself as a political "outsider", won 43.7% ​of the votes, while Cepeda reached 40.9%, after the counting of all polling station ballots was ‌completed.

Initially, Cepeda did not acknowledge the results, alleging a discrepancy in the voter registry and possible irregularities in more than 800,000 identity cards, but later said he had ⁠no evidence of irregularities.

The right-wing candidate made his attendance at a ⁠televised debate conditional on Cepeda, an ally of current President Gustavo Petro, acknowledging last week's first-round results.

"In my capacity as presidential candidate for the Historic Pact and the Alliance for Life, I inform the public that, once the counting is finished, I ‌acknowledge the results of the first round of the presidential election," Cepeda said ⁠on his X account.

De La Espriella, nicknamed "The Tiger," has focused ‌his campaign on security, reducing the size of ​the state, and boosting the economy. 

The 47-year-old has promised he will be "tough on crime", tackling drug trafficking, illegal armed groups and building 10 megaprisons. He's also said ‌he will strengthen the armed forces.

Cepeda, a 63-year-old philosopher and ​congressman since 2010, whose father, ⁠a communist leader, was assassinated in 1994 in a paramilitary attack ‌in Bogota, has pledged to expand the current ⁠government's social programs to reduce poverty and inequality, and promote dialogue with illegal armed groups.

Surveys have suggested Cepeda will face an even tougher contest in the second round ​as right-leaning voters will ‌no longer have multiple candidates to choose from. 

The first round of voting saw a relatively ⁠low turnout of about 58%, figures ​from the country's national registry  office showed. 

(Reporting by Luis Jaime Acosta; Writing by ​Stefanie Eschenbacher; Editing by Kate Mayberry)

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