HomeCrime / Law / JusticePeru's leftist Sanchez to face Fujimori in June presidential runoff

Peru’s leftist Sanchez to face Fujimori in June presidential runoff

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By Marco Aquino and Lucinda Elliott

LIMA, May ‌15 (Reuters) - Peru's leftist presidential candidate Roberto Sanchez will face Keiko Fujimori in the June ​runoff after narrowly securing second place in April's first‑round vote, official results showed Friday, with all votes tallied.

The month-long count led to allegations of fraud in ⁠the politically turbulent South American nation, notably from right-wing candidate Rafael Lopez Aliaga, who closely trailed Sanchez for much of the counting process. 

Fujimori, the daughter of late former President Alberto Fujimori, topped the fragmented field with 17.18% of the vote. This is her ​fourth presidential bid, which has revived a divisive family legacy in a country beset by political turmoil.

Sanchez, a congressman who is running with the backing ‌of jailed former leftist President Pedro Castillo, took in 12.03%, narrowly ahead of Lopez Aliaga, the ultra-conservative former mayor of Lima, with 11.90%. 

Sanchez had a near 21,210-vote lead over Lopez Aliaga.

“Today marks the starting point for a second round," Sanchez told reporters on ⁠Friday while on the campaign trail in Huaura, northern Lima.

"There is an immense need for a broad democratic ⁠coalition," he said, adding that he might announce his cabinet on Wednesday. 

Fujimori, who was campaigning in northern Peru, thanked supporters for her first‑round lead and pledged to crack down on crime - a top voter concern, according to polls.

“What this country needs is order and security," she said from La Libertad on Friday. "I swear to you that, with this strength I have as a mother, we ‌are going to put an end to the scourge of crime in this country.”

'BITTERLY POLARIZING'

The prolonged count since the first ⁠round held on April 12 prompted the resignation of the country's top electoral official, who ‌is now under investigation by the public prosecutor. European Union observers have said they found ​no concrete evidence of fraud.

Running for the left‑leaning Together for Peru party, Sanchez, 57, emerged as a surprise contender in a crowded first-round race, calling for a new constitution to establish a “plurinational” state in the major copper-producing country and courting disaffected rural ‌and Indigenous voters.

Financial markets have reacted nervously to the swell in support for Sanchez, ​whose proposals include revisions to mining contracts. Those concerns have ⁠been compounded by Sanchez’s close association with Castillo, who gave his endorsement from prison.

Castillo was jailed ‌on rebellion and conspiracy charges after a short-lived presidency that ended in ⁠a failed attempt to dissolve Congress in 2022.

An April 26 Ipsos opinion poll put Fujimori and Sanchez in a tie for the runoff, with each projected to win 38% of the vote. Analysts pointed to the high level of rejection both candidates ​face. 

"The second round may be bitterly polarizing," ‌said Eileen Gavin at risk intelligence firm Verisk Maplecroft, noting that far more Peruvians voted against the 2026 presidential field than for ⁠it. 

"Peruvians are actually crying out for more of a moderate, ​national unity government after a decade of political and social strife," said Gavin.

(Reporting by Marco Aquino and Lucinda Elliott; Editing ​by Daina Beth Solomon, Cassandra Garrison and Deepa Babington)

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