Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Teacher wins spot in Peruvian presidenti­al runoff

- FRANKLIN BRICENO AND REGINA GARCIA CANO

CHUGUR, Peru — Defying the polls, an elementary school teacher came in first among 18 candidates in Peru’s presidenti­al election April 11 — albeit with less than 20% of the overall vote.

Pedro Castillo’s result gave him a place in June’s presidenti­al runoff against Keiko Fujimori, one of Peru’s most establishe­d political figures and the daughter of former President Alberto

Fujimori. It is her third attempt to become president.

Castillo’s unlikely campaign comes at a turbulent time for the South American nation that has suffered like few others from the covid-19 pandemic. It recently ran through three presidents in a week after one was removed by congress over corruption allegation­s. Every president of the past 36 years has been ensnared in corruption allegation­s, some imprisoned.

Castillo’s politics mingle a nationalis­t, agrarian leftism with socially conservati­ve impulses. He has proposed nationaliz­ing mining, oil and energy sectors as well as deporting all immigrants living in the country illegally who commit crimes.

His chances of enacting his policies are uncertain. He would face a deeply divided unicameral congress that was newly elected on April 11. At the moment, his party has 37 of the 130 seats, though the electoral counting to determine how many seats each party gets has not yet concluded.

Whoever wins the runoff will have to cope with the economic hammer-blow of the pandemic, which prompted a lockdown that left about 7 million people unemployed.

The country has recorded more than 1.6 million confirmed cases and over 56,400 deaths from covid. According to data collected by Johns Hopkins University, only 1.48% of the population has been fully vaccinated.

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