Colombia’s government promised peace funds to ‘grease palms’ for ‘coup’

The administration of Colombia’s president Ivan Duque bribed lawmakers to support postponing next year’s elections, according to senators.

According to independent Senator Rodrigo Lara, government officials offered funds meant for the country’s peace process to lawmakers who agreed to support last week’s failed “coup.”


Colombia’s opposition calls for protests against attempted ‘coup’


The timeline of the first “coup” attempt

Senator Luis Fernando Velasco

The president of the National Federation of Municipalities, Gilberto Toro, proposed to postpone the national elections so they would coincide with local elections in 2023 last month.

The proposal was dismissed until Senator Luis Fernando Velasco (Liberal Party) raised the alarm on March 10, claiming the government would be bribing lawmakers into proposing a constitutional amendment.

Velasco said on Twitter that “I am told that high-level government officials are calling them to grease palms.”

Senator Luis Fernando Velasco

Duque said he was not interested in serving more time earlier last week. Nevertheless, house representatives raised the alarm again after noticing that the proposal to amend the constitution was circulating in the lower chamber.

According to Lara, the government offered lawmakers who would support the “coup” slush funds taken from social investment budgets meant for so-called PDET regions.

These war-torn regions are supposed to receive increased investment as part of a 2016 peace agreement between former President Juan Manuel Santos and former guerrilla group FARC.

Senator Rodrigo Lara


The president told investors last year that he would “advance the investments” in PDET regions that were “expected between the year 2021 and 2030.”

President Ivan Duque

Second attempt to change election date

House Representative Alejandro Chacon

The bill triggered a wave of indignation and 15 of the 22 representatives who initially signed off on the bill to vote on the constitutional amendment backed away.

Within 48 hours, however, former House president Alejandro Chacon presented a second proposal to amend the constitution.

This “transitory” constitutional amendment sought to hold the first round of the presidential election on the same day as the congressional elections in March instead of separately in May.

This proposal would be “the dream” of the “clientelists” and other corrupt politicians, who would be able to corrupt the outcome of two elections buying votes for one, according to political scientist Cesar Caballero.

The proposal would additionally make opposition primaries impossible, according to House Representative Katherine Miranda.

The second proposal was made public around the time that electoral barons of notoriously corrupt “clans” announced they would form a coalition to counter opposition attempts to win the elections.


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