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Colombia Elects Pro-Market Lawyer Duque in Presidential Runoff

Duque took 54 percent of the vote with 97 percent of polling centers counted against 42 percent for Petro. 

Colombia Elects Pro-Market Lawyer Duque in Presidential Runoff
Ivan Duque, presidential candidate for the Democratic Center Party, listens as a voter speaks. (Photographer: Tomas Ayuso/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- In the first presidential election since signing a historic peace accord with Marxist rebels, Colombia on Sunday elected Ivan Duque, a market-friendly U.S.-educated lawyer, by a large margin over Gustavo Petro, a former leftist guerrilla and mayor.

Duque took 54 percent of the vote with 97 percent of polling centers counted against 42 percent for Petro, largely validating opinion polls conducted before the vote. Duque, a disciple of former President Alvaro Uribe, will be sworn in on Aug. 7 and hold office until 2022.

Colombia Elects Pro-Market Lawyer Duque in Presidential Runoff

The former senator inherits a sluggish economy, a migration crisis from neighboring Venezuela and a surge in cocaine production which has brought chaos to parts of the countryside. Despite this, the nation is the most peaceful it has been in decades, with the homicide rate at its lowest level since the 1970s and an election free of the terror and sabotage that marred past votes.

At the peak of drug cartel violence in the 1980s and early 1990s, four presidential candidates were assassinated, and the guerrillas made voting impossible in some areas.

Without the question of security dominating the elections, the electorate was split between candidates with sharply different plans for the $300 billion economy and the 2016 peace deal with demobilized members of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC.

Duque, who was hand picked by ex-President Alvaro Uribe, backs oil and mining exploration, wants to cut corporate taxes and has criticized the peace agreement as being too lenient on ex-FARC members. Petroleum accounted for about one third of Colombia’s $38 billion in exports in 2017, according to government statistics.

Colombia Elects Pro-Market Lawyer Duque in Presidential Runoff

Petro, an economist and former guerrilla movement member, was in 2011 elected mayor of Bogota, where he subsidized public transport and water. His platform called for transitioning away from coal and oil to solar power and agricultural production.

The comfortable victory for Duque may support further gains for the peso, which has rallied more than 4 percent this year, the most in emerging markets. Higher oil prices have buoyed the currency and distinguished the country from the political turmoil afflicting Brazil and Mexico, and the economic chaos engulfing Argentina.

To contact the reporters on this story: Ezra Fieser in Bogota at efieser@bloomberg.net;Matthew Bristow in Bogota at mbristow5@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Daniel Cancel at dcancel@bloomberg.net, Philip Sanders

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