Conservative candidate Keiko Fujimori has been declared the winner of Peru’s presidential election, following a weeks-long vote count that ended with a razor-thin margin of victory.
Peru’s Electoral Office Confirms Fujimori’s Win
The country’s electoral office confirmed that Fujimori, the eldest daughter of former President Alberto Fujimori, had won the June 7 runoff vote in what was her fourth bid for the presidency.
Fujimori thanked voters for their support and said Peru was entering “a new chapter.” She pledged to lead the transition with “responsibility, humility and a profound sense of duty.”
The announcement comes days after Peru’s National Office of Electoral Processes released a final vote count showing her Popular Force party edged leftist candidate Roberto Sánchez of Together for Peru by just 49,641 ballots out of about 18 million, taking 50.13% of valid votes to Sánchez’s 49.86%.
Fujimori, 51, will be sworn in as president on July 28 and is expected to serve a five-year term alongside Luis Fernando Galarreta as first vice-president and Miguel Ángel Torres Morales as second vice-president.
Sánchez has previously said he will not recognize Fujimori’s government. Following the release of the final vote count, he alleged irregularities in the overseas vote and said he would appeal to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR).
Original reporting: El Paso News (HLL/CB) — read the source article.