And yet, it would be incorrect to say Duque’s announcement was poorly received. The reception was a mixture of national pride and anxiety. That means that from a political standpoint, this is a gamble for the president. International reaction was uniformly positive. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken commended Duque and declared in a tweet, “The U.S. stands with Colombia….” Grandi, the head of the U.N. refugee agency, gushed, “What the Colombian government has done is extraordinary, and it’s a world-class example.” Even Pope Francis offered praise for Colombia. More than praise, what Duque would like is financial support, for which Colombia has been imploring the international community for years. The U.N., along with private organizations, agree that Colombia’s effort to support Venezuelans is one of the most underfunded international crises the world faces. Within Colombia, too, there was enthusiastic support of the new plan from some unexpected quarters. An editorial in El Espectador, a liberal daily, called the conservative Duque’s plan a “courageous, humanitarian measure, that should be celebrated by everyone without reservations.” First, the paper’s editorial board said, the move is a humanitarian act that will allow Venezuelans to be treated with the dignity they deserve as human beings. Second, it is a good economic investment for the country, since it will allow Venezuelans to support themselves and ultimately benefit the economy, rather than be exploited due to their precarious status. Third, it will help Colombia beat the pandemic by including them in the vaccination program. Still, many in Colombia are left wondering what prompted the normally risk-averse Duque to make such a bold move. Perhaps he was shaken by the harsh reaction to his announcement that undocumented Venezuelans would not receive the vaccine. Perhaps he simply wanted to help the lot of the less fortunate. More likely, though, Duque is calculating that the odds of this move paying off exceed those of staying the course. After all, he is a politician. The year before an election, politicians think about electoral politics. Though Duque is prevented by Colombia’s single term limit for presidents, he would like to pass the baton off to a candidate from his political party, Democratic Center. Polls currently suggest he could instead be a drag on the party’s 2022 candidate. His approval numbers, which were dismal in the first two years of his presidency, climbed in the early months of the pandemic. But they have been sliding since then, dropping to just 32 percent in one recent poll. With the party’s most powerful figure and Duque’s mentor, former President Alvaro Uribe, currently on trial for election fraud, witness tampering and alleged complicity in crimes committed by right-wing paramilitary groups, it can ill afford an unpopular incumbent weighing it down further. To preserve any hopes that his successor in 2022 will come from the Democratic Center, Duque will need to oversee a successful vaccine deployment, a process that has barely started. Then he needs a swift return to brisk economic activity to make up for the ground lost during the pandemic, which included a five-month national lockdown. During the second quarter of 2020, the economy contracted by 15.8 percent, the worst performance in decades, with painful results for the middle class and the poor. For the entire year, gross domestic product shrank by 6.8 percent. The new year is not going to be an easy one, and time is running out for Duque. The coronavirus is still spreading, and the Brazilian variant is threatening South America. There is little doubt economic growth will return after vaccination becomes widespread. If life returns to normal, and jobs become more plentiful, Duque may be able to campaign for his party’s eventual candidate on having shepherded the country through a crisis, while having treated Venezuelans with a generosity that Colombians can be proud of. But if the economic recovery is weak and unemployment stubborn, Duque’s good deed toward Venezuelan refugees will not go unpunished at the polls. Frida Ghitis is a world affairs columnist. A former CNN producer and correspondent, she is a regular contributor to CNN and The Washington Post. Her WPR column appears every Thursday. Follow her on Twitter at @fridaghitis.It is something of a mystery why a president not known for taking big risks opted to make a move that is so politically charged just 15 months before the next presidential election.
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