Fujimori or Sánchez: What Do the Latest Polls Say Before the Second Round in Peru?
Two polls show Fujimori ahead by 2 to 4 points as 27% of voters say they will spoil their ballot or stay home.
- Right-Wing candidate Keiko Fujimori holds a narrow lead over leftist rival Roberto Sanchez one week before Peru's presidential runoff, according to two polls released on Sunday.
- Fujimori, daughter of late President Alberto Fujimori, is making her fourth presidential bid, while Sanchez is an ally of jailed former leftist President Pedro Castillo.
- A Datum Internacional poll showed Fujimori securing 39.8% to Sanchez's 35.9%, while an Ipsos survey predicts 38% for Fujimori and 35% for Sanchez in the June 7 runoff.
- With both candidates set to debate later on Sunday, Ipsos CEO Alfredo Torres noted the outcome depends heavily on undecided voters and those casting blank ballots.
- "The logic of choosing the lesser evil will ultimately determine who will be president of Peru for the 2026-2031 term," Torres said regarding the final week's outlook.
14 Articles
14 Articles
Right-wing Fujimori holds narrow lead one week before Peru ...
Conservative candidate Keiko Fujimori maintains a slight advantage over leftist Roberto Sánchez in the intention to vote, according to the latest Ipsos poll, published this Sunday by Peru 21, although the difference remains in the margin...
Right-wing Fujimori holds narrow lead one week before Peru presidential runoff, polls show
LIMA, May 31 - Right-wing candidate Keiko Fujimori holds a narrow lead over leftist Roberto Sanchez one week before Peru's presidential runoff, two polls showed on Sunday. Read more at straitstimes.com.
Fujimori, four times second in the presidential race, leads the race with 38%, ahead of 35% by Roberto Sánchez, according to a survey by Ipsos for the Peruvian media21.
Lima (EFE).- Presidential candidates Keiko Fujimori and Roberto Sánchez are 2.8 points apart, with 51.4 % and 48.6 % valid votes, respectively, in the last voting drill of the Ipsos company published this Sunday, a week after the second electoral round in Peru. On the last day allowed for the publication of polls, the Ipsos poll revealed that the candidates are very close in the results of the latest measurements, which will make their performan…
At the hour of the only presidential debate of the second round, the polls favor Keiko, but the numbers hide a key fact that no one is mentioning. Almost a third of the electorate still does not know who to vote for or intend to vitiate their vote, which makes this Sunday a day that can change everything. With so much at stake, the presidential debate becomes an opportunity for both candidates to play the whole game.
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