Right-leaning millionaire lawyer and political outsider Abelardo de la Espriella holds a slim lead over leftist senator Iván Cepeda in Colombia's preliminary presidential runoff results, with 49.66% of the vote to Cepeda's 48.7%—a margin of approximately 250,000 votes.
The preliminary count, covering 99.99% of ballots, shows de la Espriella ahead, but the result is not yet official pending a slower, manual scrutiny process expected to take several days.
Outgoing President Gustavo Petro, who endorsed Cepeda, has alleged electoral irregularities and claimed that Israel rigged the election by compromising voting software, asserting that only the "State of Israel" could have altered server IP addresses to favor de la Espriella who is pro-Israel.
Petro has called for a full recount of the ballots and an audit of the electoral software, urging calm while refusing to recognize the outcome until the official count is certified. Cepeda's campaign is challenging results from 33,000 polling stations, though no recount has ever overturned a Colombian presidential election.
De la Espriella, nicknamed "El Tigre," has denied any wrongdoing and called for national unity, while Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa'ar, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and President Donald Trump have congratulated him on his victory.
De la Espriella, 47, is a criminal defense attorney known for representing paramilitary leaders and high-profile clients, including figures linked to drug trafficking. He campaigns on a hardline security platform, promising to end peace talks with armed groups, build 10 mega-prisons, and boost oil and gas production.
In contrast, Cepeda, 63, is a close ally of Petro and vows to continue the outgoing president's "Total Peace" policy, which focuses on negotiations with armed groups, social reforms, and a moratorium on new fossil fuel projects.
The election marks a potential sharp rightward shift in Colombia, aligning with a broader regional trend of right-wing victories in Latin America.