
Peru’s presidential race on a razor’s edge as Fujimori clings to lead
With fewer than 40,000 votes separating the candidates and 0.6% of ballots still under review, leftist Roberto Sánchez calls supporters to the streets alleging irregularities.
Peru’s interminable presidential election entered its most volatile phase yet on Thursday, as right-wing candidate Keiko Fujimori opened a narrow but widening lead over leftist rival Roberto Sánchez with just 0.6 per cent of votes left to count. According to the latest figures from the National Office of Electoral Processes, Fujimori held 50.11 per cent of valid ballots against Sánchez’s 49.89 per cent — a margin of roughly 39,100 votes. The remaining pool of contested and overseas ballots, concentrated heavily in Lima and among the Peruvian diaspora, is large enough to swing the outcome, leaving the Andean nation suspended between two irreconcilable political visions.
Sánchez, who has repeatedly cast doubt on the integrity of the count, responded by summoning supporters to protest what he termed “irregularities” in the tabulation process. His call echoed through social media and street mobilisations even as electoral authorities continued their meticulous review of disputed tally sheets. The tension is rooted in a campaign that pitted Fujimori, the daughter of imprisoned former strongman Alberto Fujimori, against a left-wing schoolteacher who promised to rewrite the constitution and dismantle the neoliberal model. For Fujimori, this is a fourth bid for the presidency, and her campaign has sought to distance itself from the authoritarian legacy of her father while appealing to urban and coastal voters fearful of radical change.
Viewed from Brasília and Buenos Aires, the Peruvian standoff carries unsettling echoes of the region’s recent polarised contests, where narrow margins and allegations of fraud have tested institutional resilience. Analysts in Washington note that the outcome will shape the ideological balance of a fragmented South America, with a Sánchez victory likely to strengthen the bloc of left-leaning governments while a Fujimori presidency would consolidate a Pacific Alliance axis more friendly to market orthodoxy. European diplomats, meanwhile, are watching for any sign that the electoral authority’s credibility could be undermined, given the potential knock-on effects for trade negotiations and cooperation on narcotics and migration.
The immediate challenge is procedural: roughly 140,000 contested ballots must be adjudicated, a process that could drag on for days or even weeks. The electoral tribunal has urged calm, but the margin is so thin that legal challenges are almost inevitable. Should Fujimori’s lead hold, she will inherit a country cleaved by class and geography, with Sánchez’s base in the rural highlands unlikely to accept defeat quietly. A protracted dispute would not only delay the formation of a government but also deepen the distrust that has already seen three presidents cycle through office in five years. For a nation still reeling from the pandemic’s brutal toll, the real test will be whether the eventual winner can govern a society that views the result as illegitimate.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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In Peru, the presidential outcome remains uncertain as Keiko Fujimori leads by fewer than 40,000 votes. The left denounces irregularities and calls for protests, questioning the transparency of the count.
In Peru, the extremely slow count of the runoff gives Keiko Fujimori the lead for now. The left-wing opponent denounces a lack of transparency, as the country awaits a final result.
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