Peru votes in a presidential runoff seen as test of Latin America’s rightward shift

Il Perù vota in un ballottaggio presidenziale visto come un test della svolta a destra dell’America Latina


A poster featuring presidential candidates is displayed at a polling station ahead of the June 7 runoff election in Lima, Peru, June 6, 2026. REUTERS/Stifs Paucca (Reuters)

By Alexander Villegas and Marco Aquino

LIMA, June 7 (Reuters) - Peruvians are voting in what is expected to be a tight presidential run-off election on Sunday that will either continue Latin America’s rightward shift or buck the trend with a leftist candidate who has rattled markets.

Voters are choosing between conservative Keiko Fujimori, the daughter of hardline former President Alberto Fujimori, and leftist Roberto Sanchez, who likes to campaign wearing a cowboy hat and emulates imprisoned former President Pedro Castillo’s rural appeal.

Polls show the candidates in a statistical tie.

Chile, Argentina, Costa Rica and Ecuador have elected right-wing presidents in their latest elections, and Bolivia ended two decades of socialist rule in its presidential contest last year.

Peruvian voters have told pollsters they are overwhelmingly concerned with crime. Homicide and extortion rates have soared, leading to widespread protests and the ouster of former President Dina Boluarte.

Fujimori, who previously tried to distance herself from her father’s authoritarian, tough-on-crime policies, won the first round of voting in April as she leaned into his legacy. She compared his fight against left-wing Maoist insurgents to the country’s current struggle with organized crime. Fujimori’s father was later jailed for human rights abuses and died in 2024.

This election marks Fujimori’s fourth time in a presidential runoff. She lost the 2021 race by about 45,000 votes, or just over 0.2%, to Castillo.

Election observers and Peru’s ONPE electoral authority said voting was proceeding normally. The first-round vote in April was marred by delays that led to an extra day of voting and delayed results.

Fujimori said her party had recruited 95,000 representatives to monitor polling stations around the country and Sanchez called on people’s “most remote villages” to go out and vote.

MARKETS RATTLED BY SANCHEZ’S MOMENTUM

Sanchez is hoping he can replicate Castillo’s victory by focusing on Peru’s other major political issue, inequality and the vast socioeconomic divide between those living in the capital Lima and rural Peruvians.

He has promised an agenda of ambitious reform, including a new constitution, overhaul of mining concessions and boosting investment in rural regions. 

Sanchez’s proposals have resonated with many, including the country’s growing informal mining sector, but have rattled markets. Peruvian stocks fell on Friday as he gained strength in polls to pull level with Fujimori.

Tensions are high, and a chaotic first round led to accusations of fraud and threats of protests from both camps. Whoever wins will also have to deal with a fragmented Congress that has removed three presidents in the last five years.

“It’s complicated in such a polarized world and election. The feelings are hard to process, but I hope whoever wins, there can be some standing and reconciliation,” said Eric Beya, a young voter in Lima.

Polls opened at 7 a.m. (1200 GMT) and will close at 5 p.m. (2200 GMT). The first results are expected within three hours, though an official count could take weeks.

(Reporting by Alexander Villegas and Marco Aquino; Editing by Cynthia Osterman and Paul Simao)

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