Uribe’s Protege Valencia Seeks to Become Colombia’s First Female President

BOGOTA, May 28 (Reuters) – Right-wing Colombian lawyer and ⁠senator ⁠Paloma Valencia is running to ⁠become her country’s first female president in a Sunday presidential contest, promising to ​strengthen security and revive the economy, which she says have deteriorated under the current leftist government.

Valencia, 48, a scion of ‌two powerful conservative families, is backed ‌by former President Alvaro Uribe, who secured major victories against leftist guerrilla groups in the 2000s, and ⁠remains influential despite ⁠an ongoing legal case in which he was found guilty of fraud and bribery, ​convictions later overturned on appeal. Uribe has denied wrongdoing, calling the case a political persecution.

“Uribe is like a father to me. I never make mistakes when it comes to loyalties. I want to take everything that worked in President Uribe’s ​government and do it again,” Valencia, who has recently slipped in polls to third, said at ⁠a ⁠recent campaign event. “I’m going to ⁠copy Uribe, who ​got Colombia back on track.”

Valencia is one of the leading candidates in the May 31 first-round vote ​to replace President Gustavo Petro, ⁠who is barred from seeking reelection. If no candidate wins more than 50% of the vote, a runoff will be held in June.

One of the most high-profile opposition leaders in Congress, she hails from Cauca province, one of the regions hardest hit by violence and a six-decade armed conflict that has killed more than 450,000.

She has ⁠criticized the 2016 peace deal with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) guerrillas, as well ⁠as Petro, who has unsuccessfully sought deals with other illegal armed groups.

“With me there will be no talks with the ELN, nor with the FARC, nor with the so-called Gaitanista Army. We will reactivate all arrest warrants and pursue them and hunt them down to bring them to prison,” Valencia said at a recent event in Bogota, referencing other guerrilla and criminal groups.

Valencia’s paternal grandfather was conservative former President Guillermo Leon Valencia, while her maternal grandfather founded a prestigious university.

She holds a master’s degree in creative writing from New York University and was a newspaper ⁠columnist and a radio commentator before entering politics.

Her first electoral bid was in 2006, when she failed to win a congressional seat, but she has been a senator for Uribe’s Democratic Center party since 2014, backing laws to support sugar producers, formalize small businesses and reduce working hours.

She is ​married to academic Tomas Rodriguez and has a young daughter.

(Reporting by Luis Jaime ​Acosta, Editing by Julia Symmes Cobb and Chiara Rodriquez)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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