Vote Counting in Peru Surpasses 99.5% of the Ballots, with Less than 15,000 Votes Separating Sánchez and López Aliaga
18 Articles
18 Articles
Peruvian politics is about to be defined among ghosts who fly over Palacio and former presidents who, from prison, retain more influence than when they were released. Tuesday 12th will be a month since the first round of the general elections and the record count has not yet ended, while bad losers, clinging to a process marked by irregularities, have fed allegations of fraud that until now they have failed to demonstrate. Still, with 97.9% of t…
The presidential elections in Peru have reached their peak of tension this weekend. While Keiko Fujimori and Roberto Sánchez launched the campaign for the second round, Rafael López is 15,000 votes behind Sánchez and insists on denouncing without proof a fraud against him. With 99.5% of the vote, Fujimori is guaranteed his place in the second round scheduled for June 7, when he gets 17.17% of the valid votes. Sánchez has 11.99% and López Aliaga …
By Andy Ortiz and Mauricio Torres, CNN en Español The vote count of the first round of the presidential elections in Peru, which has progressed slowly since the April ballots, reached the night of this Saturday 99,505 % of the computed minutes and showed a close difference between the second and third place: leftist Roberto Sánchez and the ultra-rightist Rafael López Aliaga. Preliminary results of the National Office of Electoral Processes (ONPE…
In these days, a new narrative is being developed that seeks to victimize Piero Corvetto, the former head of the ONPE, because of the tremendous irregularities produced in the elections of April 12 in Lima alone. All that chaos, which should not have happened because the elections were prepared five years in advance!, is only the fault of that man. Hummm...There is no confidenceIn networks many people continue to point out that there was fraud b…
REGIONAL AGENDA Germán Vargas, deputy executive secretary of the CNDDHH, argues that part of the political and social elite of the capital, linked to the recent marches promoted by Rafael López Aliaga, fails to understand the origin of a vote different from his own, to which he often labels as “anti-system” or “contestatarian”, without understanding the reasons behind the discontent and demands of those populations. Especially when it comes to …
With 99.5% of the votes cast, the electoral contest in Peru escalates, while candidates accuse each other of fraud and seek support for the second round.
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