In the streets of Bogotá, the presidential election feels less like a democratic exercise and more like a survival instinct. Colombia’s brutal civil war, long pushed to the margins of international headlines, is once again defining the national conversation. Cartel violence, paramilitary clashes, and the slow creep of guerrilla warfare have turned the campaign trail into a grim referendum on safety.
For voters like María, a 45-year-old teacher in Medellín, the choice is stark. “We are tired of sons being taken, daughters disappeared,” she tells me outside a makeshift polling station. “Every candidate promises peace. But peace has become a luxury we cannot afford.” Her words echo a sentiment that cuts across class lines: the human cost of this renewal is staggering. Recent figures show a 30% spike in homicides in rural areas, a return to the darkest days of the 1990s.
Candidates have responded with a predictable script. Hardliners call for military escalation, while progressives push for negotiation. Yet on the ground, the reality is messier. In Chocó, a region ravaged by both FARC dissidents and the ELN, families are fleeing their homes for the fourth time in a decade. The cultural shift is palpable: a generation raised on the 2016 peace deal now sees it as a broken promise.
What strikes me is the quiet desperation. At a campaign rally in Cali, a young man shouted at a candidate, “My brother was killed last week. What will you do?” The candidate’s answer was drowned out by chants. This is not a political debate. It is a cry for help.
Observers abroad may frame this as a security crisis, but for Colombians, it is a daily negotiation with death. The election is not about left versus right. It is about who can stop the bleeding. The winner, whoever it may be, inherits a nation exhausted by war, where peace is a word on a poster, not a lived reality.