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2 candidates with starkly different visions for Peru vie for a runoff spot

LIMA, Peru (AP) 鈥 Results Thursday from Peru’s presidential election showed such a tight race for second and third place that it could take weeks to finalize the top two candidates for the country’s in June.

A nationalist congressman allied with an imprisoned former president and an ultraconservative politician who promises to reinstate the death penalty are top contenders to face , who was virtually assured of taking the top slot among the 35 candidates in Sunday’s election.

With 93% of the ballots tallied, official results on Tuesday showed Fujimori, the conservative daughter of , leading the count with 17.06%, though far below the required 50% needed to avoid a runoff.

Behind her, Roberto S谩nchez, a nationalist congressman and former minister , earned 11.97%. Trailing narrowly in third place was Rafael L贸pez Aliaga, the ultraconservative former mayor of Peru鈥檚 capital, Lima, with 11.91%.

Suspense mounted over who would advance to the June 7 runoff, with the margin between S谩nchez and L贸pez Aliaga closer than 8,000 votes in the most recent results.

They couldn鈥檛 be more different politically.

S谩nchez, frequently seen in the wide-brimmed peasant hat that has become his trademark, has promised major economic changes, including a dramatic expansion of government spending, an extensive reform of the tax system and partial nationalization of Peru鈥檚 natural resources.

L贸pez Aliaga, the ultraconservative former mayor of Peru鈥檚 capital, Lima, focuses on a hardline security agenda, proposing to build prisons in the country鈥檚 , allowing judges to conceal their identities and expelling foreigners who are living illegally in Peru.

The narrow margin is compounded by approximately 1,600 pending tally sheets from remote villages and abroad. Additionally, another 5,000 sheets have been challenged, leaving the electoral courts with an appeals process that could take weeks to resolve.

鈥淚n Peru, a percentage of tally sheets are always 鈥榗hallenged鈥 due to potential mathematical errors,” explained 脕lvaro Henzler, president of Transparencia, a democracy-watchdog group that deployed 4,000 observers. “When this occurs, they are sent to 60 special electoral boards for review.鈥

In 2021, Peru’s electoral tribunal proclaimed first-round results 37 days after the April 11 vote. At that time, however, the gap between the second-place contenders exceeded 238,000 votes from the start, leaving little room for suspense.

鈥淚n this case, since the race is so tight, the contested tally sheets could end up altering the standings; that is why it is taking longer,鈥 Henzler noted.

A presidential candidate needs more than 50% of votes to win outright. The two candidates with the most votes in a first round advance to the runoff on June 7.

The winner will be Peru鈥檚 and will replace , who was elected interim president in February. He replaced another interim leader who was just four months into his term.

In her fourth bid for the presidency, Fujimori has promised to crack down on crime but has also defended laws that experts say make it difficult to prosecute criminals. The laws, which her party backed in recent years, eliminated preliminary detention in certain cases and raised the threshold for seizing criminal assets.

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