Colombia’s Congress’s kicks off its new legislative year electing an allegedly criminal Senate president in a possibly illegal home-commuting session on Monday.
Outgoing Senate President Lidio Garcia unilaterally decided to inaugurate the new legislative year from home 10 days after the Constitutional Court ruling dumped the presidential decree allowing this.
The Constitutional Court ruled that the legislative branch — not the president — has the authority to change regulations that would allow the lawmakers to work from home in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Anarchy in Congress
The party leaders of the House of Representatives are expected to convene in the capitol and vote on the regulation allowing home-commuting that would allow the representatives to elect a new president from home.
Garcia’s decision that he, and not the Senate, takes the decisions in the high chamber creates the possibility that the court declares that the Liberal Party senator is unauthorized as the president to do this.
This would consequently nullify the election of a new Senate president on Monday and every other vote taken by the Senate unconstitutional unless the court changes the rules.
Court sinks decree allowing Colombia’s congress to work from home
Alleged criminal ahead
As if Garcia’s creative interpretation of democracy wasn’t weird enough, a Senate majority is in favor of electing Senator Arturo Char, an alleged criminal investigated by the Supreme Court, president while the country is in an unprecedented crisis.
The leading member of the notoriously corrupt Char Clan used to be famous for his mediocre success as a pop singer until the Supreme Court began investigating alleged election fraud in 2018 and his alleged participation in the jailbreak of a lawmaker last year.
According to Alejandra Barrios, the director of election observation NGO MOE, this leaves the impression Congress is less committed to dealing with Colombia’s worst economic crisis in history than respecting backroom deals leaving an allegedly criminal pop singer in charge of the Senate.
MOE director Alejandra Barrios
The ‘clans’: the criminal forces rigging Colombia’s economy and democracy
Can Congress sink any lower?
Congress was already considered Colombia’s most corrupt public institution, a questionable honor it seems to want to consolidate by electing an allegedly corrupt pop singer as president.
While concerns are growing that some of the allegedly most inept politicians in the country, Duque and Char, are facing the crisis of the century while neck-deep in corruption investigations, the projected senate president has allegedly gone into hiding to avoid having to respond over the feared quagmire.
El Tiempo newspaper political analyst Fernando Posada
Explaining how to run the Senate while facing Colombia’s biggest crisis and a Supreme Court investigation may simply be too complicated for a mediocre pop singer, whose family virtually owns the northern Atlantico province and has been involved in multiple corruption and war crimes scandals.