Eight presidents in ten years—a churn that reflects deeper institutional fragility
Fujimori commands 16.5-16.6% in exit polls, significantly ahead of nearest rivals López Aliaga and Nieto, guaranteeing her runoff spot. Electoral logistics failures in Lima prevented 63,300 citizens from voting, triggering investigations into ONPE leadership and transport contractors.
- Keiko Fujimori polled at 16.5-16.6% in exit polls, securing runoff spot
- 63,300 Peruvians in Lima unable to vote due to material distribution failures
- Runoff scheduled for June 7, 2026; eight presidents in past ten years
- 27.3 million Peruvians eligible to vote; no candidate achieved majority in first round
Keiko Fujimori leads exit polls in Peru's presidential election with 16.5-16.6%, securing a spot in the June 7 runoff amid logistical voting problems that disenfranchised thousands.
Keiko Fujimori emerged from Peru's first-round presidential voting on Sunday with a commanding lead in exit polls, positioning herself as the clear frontrunner for a June 7 runoff. The right-wing candidate, who carries the political legacy of her father Alberto Fujimori's 1990-2000 presidency, captured between 16.5 and 16.6 percent of the vote according to two major polling firms—Datum and Ipsos—giving her a decisive edge over a fragmented field of rivals. Her nearest competitors trailed significantly: ultraconservative Rafael López Aliaga polled between 11 and 12.8 percent, centrist Jorge Nieto between 10.7 and 11.6 percent, and rightist Ricardo Belmont between 10.5 and 11.8 percent. With no candidate able to secure an outright majority in the first round, Fujimori's lead all but guarantees her spot in the two-person runoff that will determine Peru's next president for the 2026-2031 term.
The election unfolded against a backdrop of significant logistical failure. Electoral authorities struggled to distribute voting materials across Lima, the capital, causing delays at polling stations and preventing voting entirely at 211 locations. The consequence was stark: approximately 63,300 Peruvians in the capital were unable to cast ballots. The disruption triggered formal investigations by Peru's Prosecutor's Office, the National Judicial Council, and the National Electoral Jury into Piero Corvetto, the head of the National Electoral Processes Office (ONPE), as well as the private transport company contracted to handle material distribution in Lima and the neighboring Callao province.
The scale of the election was substantial. More than 27.3 million Peruvians were eligible to vote on Sunday, selecting not only a new president but the full slate of national authorities for the coming five years. The voting took place within a country marked by profound political turbulence—eight presidents have held office in the past decade, a churn that reflects deeper institutional fragility and recurring crises of governance.
Alfredo Torres, the head of Ipsos Peru, cautioned that the exit polls themselves might carry a subtle distortion. The unusually high number of Lima voters who were unable to participate could skew the results in favor of candidates who polled less strongly in the capital, he suggested to the Latina television channel. This caveat underscores how the logistical breakdown did not merely prevent voting—it potentially altered the statistical picture of voter preference itself.
Fujimori's path to the runoff appears secure. As the only candidate with a clear plurality in both major exit polls, she will face whichever of her rivals emerges as the second-place finisher once official tallies are completed. The National Electoral Jury will release those preliminary official results in the coming hours, determining whether López Aliaga, Nieto, Belmont, or another candidate will meet Fujimori in June. What remains uncertain is not whether she will compete in the runoff, but against whom—and whether the logistical failures that marred Sunday's voting will shape the narrative and legitimacy of the contest to come.
Notable Quotes
The exit polls might carry a subtle distortion in favor of candidates who polled less strongly in the capital, due to the unusually high number of Lima voters unable to participate.— Alfredo Torres, head of Ipsos Peru
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Why does Fujimori's lead matter so much when she's only at 16 percent?
Because no one else is close. In a fragmented field, 16 percent is a commanding plurality. She's guaranteed a spot in the runoff no matter what happens next.
And the voting problems in Lima—how significant are those really?
Significant enough to trigger investigations at three levels of government. Sixty-three thousand people couldn't vote. That's not a rounding error—that's a real chunk of the electorate silenced by administrative failure.
Could those missing votes have changed the outcome?
Possibly. The polling analyst himself said the exit polls might be skewed because Lima voters were underrepresented. We won't know until official counts come in.
What does Peru's political history tell us about what comes next?
Eight presidents in ten years. That's the real story. Whoever wins in June will inherit a country where the presidency has become almost a revolving door. Stability is the thing Peru doesn't have.
Is Fujimori a stabilizing figure or part of the problem?
That depends who you ask. She carries her father's name—which means she carries both his legacy and the baggage that comes with it. The runoff will tell us how Peru feels about that inheritance.