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Latin America·Elections

Peru's presidential race on a knife's edge as Fujimori clings to narrow lead

Wednesday, 17 June 2026, 06:39 · 1 min read

Right-wing candidate Keiko Fujimori holds a lead of roughly 36,000 to 90,000 votes over leftist rival Roberto Sánchez in Peru's presidential election, with over 99% of ballots counted and only disputed ballots — largely from Lima, Fujimori's electoral stronghold — still outstanding. The two candidates represent sharply contrasting visions for the country: Fujimori, daughter of former authoritarian leader Alberto Fujimori (1990–2000), has campaigned on security crackdowns and fiscal austerity, while Sánchez has proposed a new plurinational constitution and a progressive tax overhaul, though he moderated his platform significantly after advancing to the runoff. The outcome matters beyond Peru's borders, as a Fujimori victory would deepen a conservative wave already reshaping South America and further isolate Brazil's left-leaning President Lula in the region.

Sources
El PaísFujimori roza la victoria en el escrutinio de las presidenciales de Perú diez días después de la votación ↗︎Folha de S.PauloKeiko e Sánchez propõe projetos de país opostos para o Peru; entenda ↗︎
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