Jerí Sworn In as Peruvian President After Congress Impeaches Boluarte
Boluarte was impeached unanimously for corruption, failure to control crime, and violent repression; over 15,900 extortion complaints surged this year, officials said.
- Peru's Congress impeached President Dina Boluarte with 124 votes out of 130, primarily due to her government's inability to control rising crime and violence in the country.
- Jos� Jer� was sworn in as interim president following Boluarte's impeachment, serving until the upcoming elections in April 2026.
- The impeachment was prompted by widespread public outrage over a recent violent incident at a concert, compounded by a surge in organized crime and homicides.
- Peru has faced chronic political instability, cycling through six presidents in less than a decade, as internal conflicts persist.
482 Articles
482 Articles
Peruvian Lawmakers Swear In New President
In Peru, lawmakers swore in a new president, 38-year-old head of Peru’s Legislature, José Jerí, soon after voting unanimously to remove President Dina Boluarte. Her removal comes after months of deadly protests in rural Andean and Indigenous communities; rights groups accused Boluarte’s government of using lethal force to suppress the protests. Boluarte was also enmeshed in a corruption scandal involving undeclared assets and watches.
In Peru, reason no longer governs, but improvisation. Last night Congress dismissed Dina Boluarte for “permanent moral incapacity”—that magic formula that serves to disguise interests—and today, as if fate mocked the country, the presidential chair is occupied by José Jerí Oré, a 38-year-old lawyer whose resume generates more alarm than hope. The most serious thing is that the same Congress that protected him from accountability has now made him…
José Jerí is appointed Acting President of Peru, in a new chapter of corruption scandals from Power.
The president had become unpopular during her term of office by numerous scandals, but even after her removal the trenches remain deep in the country.
Peru dawned on Friday with a new president who replaced Dina Boluarte, who was removed by Congress in the midst of a crisis due to the rise in crime, thus adding a new chapter to his chronic institutional instability reflected in the seven leaders who have succeeded in power over the past nine years.
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