Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Peru's Security Election: Keiko Fujimori's Fourth Bid And The Stakes Behind It


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Keiko Fujimori has launched her fourth run for Peru's presidency, choosing the northern city of Trujillo-hard-hit by extortion and gang violence-to promise a tougher security agenda.

The timing is deliberate: days earlier, Peru's Constitutional Court ended a long-running money-laundering case linked to her 2011 and 2016 campaigns, removing a legal cloud that trailed prior bids. Peru's first round is scheduled for April 2026.

The story behind the story is the security emergency shaping daily life and investment decisions.

In cities like Trujillo and parts of Lima, small businesses report“quota” demands and occasional explosive attacks tied to organized crime.

Voters are asking for faster criminal trials, tighter prison control, and better coordination among police, prosecutors, and the armed forces.

Any candidate who can deliver visible improvements-safer buses, open storefronts, stable logistics-will gain immediate credibility.

Fujimori leads the center-right Popular Force and carries high name recognition, having placed second in 2011, 2016, and 2021.


Peru's Security Election: Keiko Fujimori's Fourth Bid And The Stakes Behind It
Her challenge is to broaden beyond a loyal base and present practical, costed plans that reassure moderates and institutions.

The right-of-center lane is competitive, with other law-and-order figures courting similar voters.

On the left, parties emphasize social spending and rights frameworks but face skepticism over whether those approaches reduce extortion quickly enough.

Why this matters if you live outside Peru: the country anchors supply chains from copper and fishmeal to tourism and services.

A credible security reset would lower risk premiums, improve project timelines, and stabilize local hiring-effects felt from mining towns to the Port of Callao.

If plans stall, expect higher security costs, delayed contracts, and a tougher environment for small and mid-size firms, including foreign-owned ones.

What to watch next: specific proposals with timelines-more investigators for anti-extortion units, prison intelligence and staffing, judicial fast-track for violent and organized crime, and technology for port and border screening.

The candidate who turns these from slogans into measurable milestones will set the tone for 2026 and beyond.

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The Rio Times

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