Berliner Boersenzeitung - Keiko Fujimori: Peru's biggest political loser inches toward victory

EUR -
AED 4.261681
AFN 73.106699
ALL 94.816906
AMD 427.282052
ANG 2.077637
AOA 1064.688799
ARS 1662.756221
AUD 1.640346
AWG 2.091675
AZN 1.96996
BAM 1.95553
BBD 2.338377
BDT 142.521547
BGN 1.962148
BHD 0.437836
BIF 3474.390261
BMD 1.16043
BND 1.487395
BOB 8.051888
BRL 5.924331
BSD 1.16104
BTN 109.730847
BWP 15.556852
BYN 3.214356
BYR 22744.42309
BZD 2.335078
CAD 1.62387
CDF 2693.357105
CHF 0.920691
CLF 0.026168
CLP 1029.904685
CNY 7.845144
CNH 7.841627
COP 4014.413884
CRC 528.826971
CUC 1.16043
CUP 30.751388
CVE 110.250725
CZK 24.153762
DJF 206.751448
DKK 7.47496
DOP 68.110594
DZD 154.199726
EGP 58.161319
ERN 17.406446
ETB 187.181951
FJD 2.567392
FKP 0.864374
GBP 0.864561
GEL 3.069317
GGP 0.864374
GHS 13.061196
GIP 0.864374
GMD 84.131262
GNF 10169.683246
GTQ 8.849854
GYD 242.866461
HKD 9.090383
HNL 31.046445
HRK 7.535843
HTG 151.629061
HUF 349.300504
IDR 20580.221607
ILS 3.383465
IMP 0.864374
INR 109.706158
IQD 1520.976852
IRR 1596464.119502
ISK 144.403935
JEP 0.864374
JMD 183.624642
JOD 0.822785
JPY 186.188053
KES 150.21726
KGS 101.479104
KHR 4662.356148
KMF 493.182887
KPW 1044.387181
KRW 1750.815816
KWD 0.357598
KYD 0.967566
KZT 566.196931
LAK 25548.471862
LBP 103969.942184
LKR 388.959638
LRD 211.310819
LSL 18.739774
LTL 3.426448
LVL 0.701932
LYD 7.397042
MAD 10.73451
MDL 20.260202
MGA 4824.33378
MKD 61.622507
MMK 2436.207854
MNT 4150.351234
MOP 9.367506
MRU 46.339
MUR 54.819027
MVR 17.929036
MWK 2013.221982
MXN 19.9584
MYR 4.721322
MZN 74.163835
NAD 18.739612
NGN 1575.701384
NIO 42.724468
NOK 11.006717
NPR 175.568242
NZD 1.989301
OMR 0.446191
PAB 1.16104
PEN 3.955188
PGK 5.086341
PHP 69.942548
PKR 323.029575
PLN 4.238876
PYG 7085.021588
QAR 4.24445
RON 5.230639
RSD 117.385527
RUB 84.135482
RWF 1721.762232
SAR 4.354042
SBD 9.358913
SCR 16.054323
SDG 696.844477
SEK 10.880881
SGD 1.487781
SHP 0.866378
SLE 28.720215
SLL 24333.635884
SOS 663.502655
SRD 43.321119
STD 24018.552916
STN 24.496617
SVC 10.158685
SYP 128.264734
SZL 18.736251
THB 37.740613
TJS 10.762714
TMT 4.061504
TND 3.398531
TOP 2.794037
TRY 53.726971
TTD 7.886911
TWD 36.575356
TZS 3040.329445
UAH 51.997567
UGX 4295.406822
USD 1.16043
UYU 46.873931
UZS 13944.194529
VES 686.714069
VND 30519.302411
VUV 137.93675
WST 3.180989
XAF 655.866428
XAG 0.016635
XAU 0.000268
XCD 3.13612
XCG 2.092493
XDR 0.816591
XOF 655.872079
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.873199
ZAR 18.811785
ZMK 10445.258331
ZMW 20.521166
ZWL 373.657906
  • AZN

    1.5610

    178.831

    +0.87%

  • GSK

    0.1750

    52.405

    +0.33%

  • BCE

    -0.1250

    23.915

    -0.52%

  • BTI

    0.6800

    61.74

    +1.1%

  • NGG

    1.3100

    82.88

    +1.58%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    22.32

    -0.09%

  • RYCEF

    0.4300

    18.63

    +2.31%

  • RBGPF

    2.1500

    62.87

    +3.42%

  • BCC

    -0.1100

    71.48

    -0.15%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    22.29

    -0.13%

  • JRI

    -0.0050

    12.775

    -0.04%

  • VOD

    -0.0750

    14.925

    -0.5%

  • RIO

    0.4000

    106.29

    +0.38%

  • RELX

    -0.2800

    32.56

    -0.86%

  • BP

    -0.3090

    41.281

    -0.75%

Keiko Fujimori: Peru's biggest political loser inches toward victory
Keiko Fujimori: Peru's biggest political loser inches toward victory / Photo: STRINGER - AFP

Keiko Fujimori: Peru's biggest political loser inches toward victory

Peru's Keiko Fujimori has run for the presidency three times and lost three times -- in a country that has had eight presidents in the last decade alone.

Text size:

But on this, her fourth attempt, the daughter of disgraced former president Alberto Fujimori may have a last best chance at power, riding a right‑wing wave sweeping Latin America.

Ballots are still being counted from Sunday's poll, which was marred by a series of logistical foul-ups, but the 50‑year‑old is ahead and the only candidate virtually assured of reaching the runoff.

Poised and polished, with a sharp pantsuit and a perfect smile, Fujimori looks like someone raised for politics.

The divorced mother of two has been a congresswoman and party leader. She became first lady at 19, after her mother denounced her father for corruption.

While her rivals stumble through speeches, Fujimori speaks with ease. She looks every inch the political operative.

Educated in the United States, she has dealt with emperors, queens and presidents, most notably her father.

- Dynasty -

Alberto Fujimori ruled Peru through the turbulent 1990s and became one of its most consequential and polarizing leaders.

The son of Japanese migrants, he won praise for crushing hyperinflation and defeating the Maoist Shining Path insurgency.

He was later disgraced, exiled and jailed for running death squads and embezzling millions of dollars from state funds.

For decades, the Fujimori name has helped and haunted Keiko, a political inheritance comparable to the Bushes, Bhuttos or Sukarnos.

It gave her an identity, a loyal support base, vast resources and instant recognition. She may be the only one of 35 candidates known by every Peruvian.

"She does not have to fight to be known. She is already a brand," said political scientist Jorge Aragon.

This fourth bid "may well be the one that works," he said.

Alberto died in September 2024, making this Keiko's first campaign without her father. But that does not mean he is absent.

Keiko frequently refers to him. Her offices are filled with paintings and busts in his likeness.

She visited his grave on election morning.

"I miss him," Keiko told AFP. "But everywhere I go, people remind me of him and tell me anecdotes, which is the loveliest thing."

"What I love most is when they say, 'Her father came and the dog bit him' or 'her father came and I stepped on him.'"

- The 'enemy' -

Millions of Peruvians hold darker memories of Alberto and refuse to vote for a Fujimori.

Keiko has also been jailed multiple times in relation to corruption allegations.

Keiko believes that opposition to her family has been an organizing principle of a series of presidents who beat her at the ballot box.

"In the last 25 years, we have been governed by anti‑Fujimori governments," she said, sparing only Alan Garcia.

"All the others focused on insults and generating hatred and division."

Now, with crime surging and nostalgia for iron‑fist rule growing, she clearly believes the Fujimori name is an asset.

"I believe that time and history are giving my father the place he deserves," she said.

"When Peru is bleeding from criminals and extortionists, what they are asking for is a Fujimori. Well, here I am."

She has promised to restore order in her first 100 days.

Fujimori has also changed her tone. Once openly confrontational, she says she now favours consensus and debate.

"I have made mistakes," she said, "in being very confrontational."

Sometimes, these old instincts still surface. On election night, with conservatives polling strongly, she declared the leftist "enemy" defeated.

If she wins, consensus and coalition-building will matter. Several Peruvian presidents have been impeached, ousted or jailed after clashing with Congress.

"In future when people think of Fujimori" she hopes they think of both her and her father.

"The bar is set high, and I hope to clear it," she said.

(T.Renner--BBZ)