Peru is set to elect its 10th president in a decade
A supporters hols a banner of presidential candidate Keiko Fujimori during her closing campaign rally in Lima, Peru, Thursday. Rodrigo Abd/AP hide caption LIMA, Peru โ Peruvians will elect their new president Sunday with polls suggesting a polarized but tight race between perenn
A supporters hols a banner of presidential candidate Keiko Fujimori during her closing campaign rally in Lima, Peru, Thursday. Rodrigo Abd/AP hide caption
LIMA, Peru โ Peruvians will elect their new president Sunday with polls suggesting a polarized but tight race between perennial hard-right candidate Keiko Fujimori and leftist Roberto Sรกnchez.
Fujimori had been polling a few points ahead, with around a quarter of voters still undecided, but Reuters reports Sรกnchez could have narrowed the gap in the last week.
Keiko, as she's known in Peru, is running on the legacy of her father, the late, disgraced strongman President Alberto Fujimori. That legacy includes crushing both hyperinflation and the Maoist insurgents of the Shining Path, who bathed Peru in blood in the 1980s and 1990s. It also includes running death squads โ for which he was eventually sentenced to 25 years in prison โ shuttering congress, bribing journalists and epic corruption.
"If she wins, there will be performative moderation. There will be this discourse about dialogue and democracy, but the reality will be that she will have her hands on the levers of power and will use them in an authoritarian way," predicts political scientist Paula Tรกvara. "If there are protests, expect a repressive response."
Peruvian presidential candidate Keiko Fujimori waves during a campaign rally in Huacho, north of Lima, Peru, on June 2. Ernesto Benavides/AFP via Getty Images hide caption
The runoff vote will be the fourth in a row for Keiko Fujimori, 51, after narrowly losing in 2011, 2016 and 2021. Many Peruvians accuse her of being a bad loser, who for months refused to acknowledge her loss in 2016 and then made unfounded accusations of electoral fraud in 2021.
They also blame her for using her Popular Force party, the largest in the last two congressional terms, to block corruption and organized crime investigations and to destabilize multiple governments, contributing to Peru's calamitous run of nine presidents in the last decade.

