A seismic political shift in the Andes. Yesterday, Colombian voters handed a resounding victory to populist candidate Carlos Moreno, a Trump acolyte whose campaign mixed TikTok virality, AI-generated deepfakes of his opponent, and a promise to dismantle the 2016 peace deal. For British pension funds, it means recalibrating risk models. For tech ethicists, it is a case study in algorithmic manipulation of democracy.
Moreno’s win was no accident. His team used machine learning to micro-target rural voters with WhatsApp messages, while deepfake videos made his rival, centrist Elena Rojas, appear to endorse austerity measures she opposed. The platforms? Largely unregulated. The result? A 52 percent victory that leaves Colombia’s fragile institutions on edge.
As a Silicon Valley transplant now watching from London, I see this as a Black Mirror episode written in real time. The same recommendation engines that sell sneakers can now peddle political reality. Moreno’s playbook mirrors the Trump 2016 campaign but on algorithmic steroids. The question for British investors is not just about oil and coal exports (Colombia is a top coal supplier to the UK) but about the stability of a nation where disinformation can flip an election.
Let’s talk numbers. The Colombian peso dropped 4 percent on the news. Bogotá’s COLCAP index slid 2.7 percent. British firms with exposure, from Aviva to Scotiabank, are hedging. But the risk is not purely financial. If Moreno reneges on environmental commitments or restarts conflict with FARC dissidents, the resulting migrant crisis could ripple through Panama and up to the Darien Gap, a route already straining US border policy.
Yet the deeper story is about digital sovereignty. Colombia’s election authority admitted it could not verify the authenticity of campaign ads. Their AI detection tools? Outdated. Meanwhile, Moreno’s team used generative AI to flood local Facebook groups with customised memes, each tailored to individual biases. This is not misinformation; it is personalised reality. And it works.
For the common man in Bogotá or Medellín, the immediate effect will be higher food prices. Moreno’s tariff policies target US and Chinese imports, but Colombia’s supply chains are interwoven with global markets. Add to that a potential exodus of skilled workers to Chile and the UK, and you have a brain drain that stifles innovation.
Now, the British perspective. The UK’s post-Brexit trade deals with Colombia and Peru already show promise. But a populist leader who attacks courts and media undermines the rule of law. British investors value predictability. Moreno is anything but predictable. His first decree: a state of economic emergency, bypassing Congress. The optics? Think Viktor Orbán meets WhatsApp.
What should be done? First, British tech firms must stop selling election-targeting tools to unstable democracies. Voluntary restraint? Unlikely. Perhaps the UK’s Online Safety Bill can extraterritorial provisions for political ads. Second, investors need to demand auditable AI ethics clauses in their Colombia portfolios. Third, the Colombian diaspora in London should support independent media there.
I spoke with Dr. Ana Lucia Fernandez, a political technologist at LSE. She said: “We are sleepwalking into a world where elections become AI-generated simulations. Colombia is just the beta test.” She is right. The same technology used to sway voters in Bogotá will be deployed in Birmingham, Mumbai, and Berlin. The Moore’s Law of propaganda is accelerating.
In the end, Moreno’s victory is a wake-up call for the British establishment. The era of stable democratic norms is over. We now live in a high-frequency trading of public opinion, where algorithms trade trust in real time. British investors must learn to read the code of politics, not just the balance sheets. The future is already scripted in Python. It is time we debug it.
As for Colombia, the next six months will determine whether Moreno becomes a caudillo or a pragmatist. British interests depend on it. The Andean stability we monitor is not just about GDP; it is about the integrity of democratic process. And that is the hardest algorithm to crack.








