1970 Colombian general election explained

Country:Colombia
Flag Year:1970
Previous Election:1966 Colombian presidential election
Previous Year:1966
Next Election:1974 Colombian general election
Next Year:1974
Election Date:19 April 1970
Module:
Embed:yes
Type:presidential
Election Name:Presidential election
Turnout:52.53%
Image1:Misael_Pastrana.JPG
Nominee1:Misael Pastrana Borrero
Party1:Colombian Conservative Party
Alliance1:National Front
Popular Vote1:1,625,025
Percentage1:40.69%
Nominee2:Gustavo Rojas Pinilla
Party2:Colombian Conservative Party
Alliance2:National Popular Alliance
Color2:bc8f8f
Popular Vote2:1,561,468
Percentage2:39.09%
Image4:Belisario Betancur 1985.jpg
Nominee4:Belisario Betancur Cuartas
Party4:Colombian Conservative Party
Color4:813983
Popular Vote4:471,350
Percentage4:11.80%
Nominee5:Evaristo Sourdis Juliao
Party5:Colombian Conservative Party
Color5:1e90ff
Popular Vote5:336,286
Percentage5:8.42%
President
Before Election:Carlos Lleras Restrepo
Before Party:Colombian Liberal Party
After Election:Misael Pastrana Borrero
After Party:Colombian Conservative Party

General elections were held in Colombia on 19 April 1970 to elect the president, the Senate and the Chamber of Representatives.[1] It was the first time all three institutions had been elected on the same day, and was also the last election under the National Front agreement, which had restricted electoral participation to the Conservative Party and the Liberal Party, with each party allocated 50% of the seats in both houses,[2] whilst the presidency alternated between the two parties. As a result, the main contest in parliamentary elections was between factions within each party,[2] whilst only Conservative candidates ran for the presidency. The result was a victory for Misael Pastrana Borrero, who received 40.7% of the vote.[3] However, supporters of Gustavo Rojas Pinilla claimed that the election had been rigged in favour of Pastrana.[3] Rojas had also been supported by the Christian Social Democratic Party.[3] The 19th of April Movement guerrillas traced their origins to this alleged fraud.[4]

Background

The 1970 elections were set to be the last of the National Front, the agreement signed by the leaders of the Conservative and Liberal parties in the aftermath of five years of military dictatorship. In the agreement, formalized by the passage of Legislative Act 1 on 15 September 1959, the two parties pledged to alternate the power of the presidency for the next three elections. From 1958, each alternating presidential election was uncontested by the other party; the previous elections had brought to power Liberal Carlos Lleras Restrepo, while 1970 was set to be the year of the Conservatives.

Misael Pastrana Borrero, a former minister and ambassador to the United States, launched his candidacy in Medellín in September 1969. A Conservative, he was eventually nominated as the National Front candidate at the national conventions of both the Conservative and Liberal parties.[5] His platform was largely a continuation of his Liberal predecessor's moderate economic and social policies, and he campaigned with the slogan "I am not a man. I am a program."[6] President Lleras actively campaigned on his behalf, violating the impartiality of the executive.[7]

Despite Pastrana's nomination by the National Front, dissident Conservatives emerged to challenge his candidacy. Belisario Betancur and Evaristo Sourdis Juliao enjoyed the support of their regional constituencies, Antioquia and the Caribbean region.

The National Popular Alliance (ANAPO) was a political movement formed in 1961 by Gustavo Rojas Pinilla, a retired general who had ruled the country as military dictator from 1953 to 1957. ANAPO was a populist grouping of dissident liberals, conservatives, and leftists, united by their common rejection of the National Front coalition. Rojas previously ran as the ANAPO candidate in the 1962 elections against Guillermo León Valencia, but his candidacy was invalidated by the Supreme Court; this sentence had been overturned in 1967 and the ex-dictator again sought to return to the presidency by democratic means.

Results

Chamber of Representatives

Notes and References

  1. [Dieter Nohlen]
  2. Nohlen, p323
  3. Nohlen, p353
  4. Web site: Colombia: The 19th of April Movement . Federal Research Division of the Library of Congress. . December 1988 . July 31, 2015.
  5. http://www.lablaa.org/blaavirtual/biografias/pastmisa.htm Biografía de Misael Pastrana
  6. News: General Rojas, Ex‐Dictator, Claims Victory in Colombia's Presidential Race. Novitski. Joseph. 20 April 1970. The New York Times. 20 March 2021.
  7. News: Siglo XX en El Tiempo. Año 1970. 1 December 1999. El Tiempo. 20 March 2021.