Fujimori wins?

Conservative candidate Keiko Fujimori, age 51, appears to have won election for the Presidency of Peru. She leads her left-wing opponent by around 50,000 votes, out of more than 18 million cast.

Her lead appears to be larger than the number of uncounted votes remaining. That should make her the winner, shouldn’t it? Elsewhere, Wikipedia lists her as President-Elect, expected to assume office in late July.

Reuters reports,

Keiko Fujimori’s expected victory returns divisive dynasty to Peru

I had mentioned before that Fujimori’s 2026 victory margin is larger than either of her election defeats in 2016 or 2021. But, somehow, it’s her victory that’s divisive. Her narrow defeats are merely democracy at work.

As Reuters frames it,

Fujimori will become Peru’s first elected female president. Her win follows three previous failed bids — in 2011, 2016 and 2021 — each decided by narrow margins and shaped in part by a persistent “anti-Fujimori” vote that has defined the country’s elections for years.

Get this,

Fujimori takes over from Jose Balcazar, who assumed office earlier this year after Congress removed his predecessor over a scandal involving undisclosed meetings with a Chinese businessman.

So “divisive” is seen as being worse than outright corruption.

Responses

Show/Post Comments