Conservative candidate Keiko Fujimori wins Peru's presidential election in runoff

Published on 03/07/2026 - 21:06 GMT+2 Conservative politician Keiko Fujimori was declared the winner of the presidential runoff election in Peru on Friday, which was...
Published on 03/07/2026 - 21:06 GMT+2
Conservative politician Keiko Fujimori was declared the winner of the presidential runoff election in Peru on Friday, which was dominated by people’s concerns over surging crime.
Fujimori, 51, the daughter of a disgraced former president, was running for the presidency for the fourth time. She will be Peru’s ninth president in 10 years when she takes office later this month.
The election win was certified by the country's top election authority.
Figures released by election officials earlier in the week showed that with 100% of ballots tallied, Fujimori received 9,223,000 votes, or 50.135% of the total, while nationalist congressman Roberto Sánchez earned over 9,173,000 votes, or 49.865%.
Fujimori and Sánchez made it to the 7 June runoff election after defeating 33 other candidates in an April vote.
Voters were primarily concerned with increasing levels of crime, especially extortion by violent organised crime gangs, and Fujimori pledged to combat crime with an iron fist.
The winner is the daughter of the late Alberto Fujimori, the former president whose government in the 1990s defeated the Shining Path extremist rebel group but also took an authoritarian turn.
He was convicted in 2009 of human rights abuses in the fight against the rebels, and later of corruption charges.
This is a developing story and our journalists are working on further updates.




