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Trump-backed ‘Tiger’ claims victory in Colombian election

Incumbent President Gustavo Petro dismissed the declaration as “wishful thinking” until the electoral commission scrutinizes irregularities and delivers a final verdict
Published 21 Jun, 2026 22:26 | Updated 22 Jun, 2026 05:18
Trump-backed ‘Tiger’ claims victory in Colombian election

Pro-Trump lawyer Abelardo de la Espriella has claimed victory in Colombia’s presidential runoff after preliminary results showed him winning by a narrow margin, as the country’s left-wing president, Gustavo Petro, and the ruling party’s candidate, Ivan Cepeda, both vowed to scrutinize every vote.

With 99.9% of the ballots counted, de la Espriella was leading left-wing Senator Ivan Cepeda by only 250,000 votes – including 175,000 cast abroad – a much narrower margin than the three-point lead he held in the first round in May.

“Here we are, the vice president and the president-elect of the Republic are going to ensure that the popular will is respected,” de la Espriella said in an interview on Sunday night.

The incumbent, however, said the margin is too narrow and that concerns about the election’s legitimacy are too serious to ignore. “Only the judges determine who is the president of Colombia. Any declaration today of victory in the elections is merely wishful thinking,” Petro said.

He also alleged outside interference, claiming that changes in the IP addresses of several electoral servers means the voting software was compromised, adding that he would request a full recount, while claiming that “the only entity in the world capable of doing that is the state of Israel.”

Cepeda similarly stated that the preliminary count “is neither official nor binding” until observers scrutinize the results from 33,000 polling stations across the country.

De la Espriella said he already called US President Donald Trump and asked him to “defend the election results,” adding that Trump “expressed his support and recognition of our victory.”

Both candidates ran campaigns aimed at courting undecided voters and boosting turnout, which rose from 57% to more than 63%.

Cepeda, 63, a close ally of Petro, promised to continue peace talks with armed guerrilla groups that have fought the Colombian state for more than half a century. He also pledged to expand social welfare programs and introduce anti-corruption measures.

De la Espriella, 47, a political newcomer who calls himself ‘the Tiger’, campaigned on a hardline law-and-order platform. He vowed to end negotiations with armed groups and launch a broad military offensive against guerrillas, drug traffickers, and organized crime.

He also promised a sweeping crackdown on crime and an overhaul of the penal system, including mega-prisons and longer sentences – proposals that have drawn comparisons to El Salvador’s controversial President Nayib Bukele and his mass-incarceration security model.

Trump enthusiastically endorsed de la Espriella during the campaign, urging Colombians again on Wednesday to vote for the “Smart, Strong, and Tough Leader.”

De la Espriella has been critical of Petro, under whom relations between Colombia and the US – its biggest trade partner – have significantly deteriorated.

Petro, who is constitutionally barred from running again, has criticized Trump’s mass deportation policies, extrajudicial strikes on alleged drug-trafficking boats, and revival of the Monroe Doctrine, leading to online feuds between the two leaders.

The outgoing Colombian president also criticized Trump’s commando raid on Venezuela and the kidnapping of its leader, Nicolas Maduro, in January. De la Espriella openly welcomed the move.

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