The Prague Post - Keiko Fujimori: Peru's biggest political loser eyes election win

EUR -
AED 4.268358
AFN 72.641037
ALL 95.362573
AMD 428.323847
ANG 2.080962
AOA 1066.945431
ARS 1658.190133
AUD 1.619746
AWG 2.09205
AZN 1.977741
BAM 1.951996
BBD 2.340568
BDT 142.65381
BGN 1.940864
BHD 0.438241
BIF 3458.85535
BMD 1.16225
BND 1.486023
BOB 8.030452
BRL 5.837053
BSD 1.16215
BTN 110.651341
BWP 15.571852
BYN 3.210484
BYR 22780.095719
BZD 2.337275
CAD 1.609234
CDF 2649.929461
CHF 0.916184
CLF 0.026291
CLP 1034.754959
CNY 7.859772
CNH 7.862626
COP 4171.326089
CRC 529.47489
CUC 1.16225
CUP 30.799619
CVE 110.559054
CZK 24.200307
DJF 206.555274
DKK 7.472359
DOP 67.352367
DZD 154.919705
EGP 60.260795
ERN 17.433747
ETB 183.577346
FJD 2.552823
FKP 0.864198
GBP 0.86361
GEL 3.091293
GGP 0.864198
GHS 13.690946
GIP 0.864198
GMD 84.844306
GNF 10201.640905
GTQ 8.860845
GYD 243.086226
HKD 9.10854
HNL 30.881324
HRK 7.535103
HTG 152.125472
HUF 354.917963
IDR 20765.916847
ILS 3.308691
IMP 0.864198
INR 110.728117
IQD 1522.547214
IRR 1599255.699092
ISK 143.409687
JEP 0.864198
JMD 182.813697
JOD 0.824071
JPY 185.916379
KES 150.441293
KGS 101.638708
KHR 4660.621152
KMF 492.79396
KPW 1045.856566
KRW 1763.795745
KWD 0.359414
KYD 0.968425
KZT 570.914659
LAK 25511.382995
LBP 104079.46811
LKR 386.401892
LRD 212.255854
LSL 18.956
LTL 3.431821
LVL 0.703034
LYD 7.374508
MAD 10.692114
MDL 20.099086
MGA 4864.015118
MKD 61.644801
MMK 2440.387223
MNT 4157.796883
MOP 9.381037
MRU 46.467087
MUR 55.102388
MVR 17.910087
MWK 2018.828173
MXN 20.105207
MYR 4.619972
MZN 74.273557
NAD 18.955891
NGN 1592.607724
NIO 42.535299
NOK 10.801118
NPR 177.044227
NZD 1.961983
OMR 0.446891
PAB 1.16215
PEN 3.956341
PGK 5.066538
PHP 71.756108
PKR 323.457391
PLN 4.236296
PYG 7030.358359
QAR 4.234657
RON 5.25523
RSD 117.406981
RUB 85.074122
RWF 1699.209181
SAR 4.36617
SBD 9.328232
SCR 15.42632
SDG 697.933266
SEK 10.844877
SGD 1.488017
SHP 0.867737
SLE 28.649182
SLL 24371.799241
SOS 664.226411
SRD 43.222328
STD 24056.223905
STN 24.814033
SVC 10.168313
SYP 128.465906
SZL 18.968231
THB 37.996846
TJS 10.726333
TMT 4.079497
TND 3.38389
TOP 2.798418
TRY 53.405609
TTD 7.882738
TWD 36.602848
TZS 3036.381003
UAH 51.531465
UGX 4375.528589
USD 1.16225
UYU 46.699385
UZS 13912.130233
VES 647.694641
VND 30604.942373
VUV 136.303759
WST 3.157391
XAF 654.689463
XAG 0.015537
XAU 0.00026
XCD 3.141039
XCG 2.094445
XDR 0.815148
XOF 654.346821
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.341856
ZAR 18.887948
ZMK 10461.644168
ZMW 21.005332
ZWL 374.243955
  • CMSC

    -0.1000

    22.67

    -0.44%

  • CMSD

    -0.0900

    22.71

    -0.4%

  • BCC

    0.8900

    69.22

    +1.29%

  • RBGPF

    -3.0200

    60.52

    -4.99%

  • BCE

    -0.4200

    24.64

    -1.7%

  • RIO

    2.7100

    111.67

    +2.43%

  • NGG

    0.6400

    80.64

    +0.79%

  • RYCEF

    0.3200

    17.2

    +1.86%

  • RELX

    -1.2200

    33.38

    -3.65%

  • VOD

    0.1500

    15.12

    +0.99%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    12.77

    +0.86%

  • BTI

    -0.5400

    60.46

    -0.89%

  • GSK

    -0.3100

    49

    -0.63%

  • AZN

    -2.2600

    177.45

    -1.27%

  • BP

    0.4600

    43.4

    +1.06%

Keiko Fujimori: Peru's biggest political loser eyes election win
Keiko Fujimori: Peru's biggest political loser eyes election win / Photo: STRINGER - AFP/File

Keiko Fujimori: Peru's biggest political loser eyes election win

Peru's Keiko Fujimori is a perennial political loser. She has run for the nation's presidency three elections in a row -- and three times, she has lost.

Text size:

But on this, her fourth attempt, the daughter of disgraced late president Alberto Fujimori may have her best chance at power.

She is riding a right‑wing wave that is sweeping Latin America.

The 51-year-old will face leftist Roberto Sanchez in Sunday's runoff, under the still‑divisive legacy of her father, who ruled Peru in the 1990s.

In a country that switches leaders at a frantic pace, with eight presidents since 2016, Fujimori hardly needs to campaign to be known. Her surname is recognized across the Andean nation.

"It is a brand that is well positioned, whether you like it or not," said political scientist Jorge Aragon.

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

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

A business administrator educated in the United States, she has served as a lawmaker and leads her party.

She became first lady at 19, after her mother publicly broke with Alberto Fujimori, and grew up alongside heads of state and foreign leaders.

- Dynasty -

Alberto Fujimori led Peru through the turbulent 1990s, crushing Maoist Shining Path rebels and taming hyperinflation.

But he was later disgraced, exiled and jailed for corruption and crimes against humanity.

For decades, the Fujimori name has helped and haunted Keiko, giving her instant recognition, loyal voters and deep political networks -- but also plenty of critics.

"I miss him," she told AFP in April. "But everywhere I go, people remind me of him and tell me anecdotes."

Millions of Peruvians hold darker memories of her father and refuse to vote for anyone bearing the Fujimori name, blocking her path to the presidency three times.

"In the last 25 years, we have been governed by anti‑Fujimori governments," she said, making a single exception for Alan Garcia.

"All the others focused on insults and generating hatred and division among Peruvians," she argues.

Critics blame her and her party for much of Peru's political instability, citing Fuerza Popular's heavy influence and deal‑making in Congress.

This is her first presidential campaign without her father, who died in 2024.

With crime now the top concern for voters, she has leaned into his legacy under a single word: "order."

"I believe Peruvians want a Fujimori," she said. "Here I am."

Those close to Fujimori describe her as persistent, disciplined and relentless.

"Every blow life has dealt her has not broken her, it has made her stronger than anyone could imagine," her vice‑presidential running mate Miki Torres told AFP.

She spent more than a year in pretrial detention while under investigation for alleged money laundering linked to the Odebrecht corruption scandal. The case remains unresolved.

Long seen as confrontational, Fujimori has tried to soften her image and present herself as more conciliatory.

"I have made mistakes," she said during a presidential debate on Sunday. "I learned from them and came back much stronger."

Keiko, whose name in Japanese means "blessed child," is widely known as "La China" -- a school nickname referencing her Asian features.

The divorced mother of two daughters, aged 18 and 16, once said that "learning to be a mother is harder than running for president."

Will she be remembered more than her father?

"The bar is high, and I hope to clear it," she told AFP.

B.Barton--TPP