2016 Peruvian general election

{{Short description|none}}

{{Expand Spanish|topic=gov|date=March 2016}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2020}}

{{Infobox election

| country = Peru

| flag_year = state

| module = {{Infobox election

| embed = yes

| election_date = 10 April 2016 (first round)
5 June 2016 (second round)

| turnout = 81.80% (first round)
80.09% (second round)

| previous_election = 2011 Peruvian general election

| previous_year = 2011

| next_election = 2021 Peruvian general election

| next_year = 2021

| type = presidential

| election_name = Presidential election

| image1 = Pedro Pablo Kuczynski (cropped 2).jpg

| nominee1 = Pedro Pablo Kuczynski

| popular_vote1 = 8,596,937

| percentage1 = 50.12%

| party1 = Peruvians for Change

| running_mate1 = Martín Vizcarra
Mercedes Aráoz

| image2 = Keiko Fujimori 2 (cropped).jpg

| nominee2 = Keiko Fujimori

| party2 = Popular Force

| popular_vote2 =8,555,880

| percentage2 = 49.88%

| running_mate2 = José Chlimper
{{ill|Vladimiro Huaroc|es}}{{efn|name= EXCLUDEDFROMCAMPAIGN}}

| title = President

| before_election = Ollanta Humala

| before_party = Peru Wins

| after_election = Pedro Pablo Kuczynski

| after_party = Peruvians for Change

| map_image = 2016 Peruvian presidential election - 2nd round.svg

| map_size = 325px

| map_caption = Results of the second round by region (left) and province (right). Darker shades indicate a higher vote share.

| module = {{Infobox legislative election

| embed = yes

| election_date = 10 April 2016

| election_name = Congressional election

| previous_election = 2011

| next_election = 2020

| seats_for_election = All 130 seats in the Congress of Peru

| majority_seats = 66

| leader1 = Keiko Fujimori

| party1 = Popular Force

| percentage1 = 36.34

| last_election1 = 37

| seats1 = 73

| leader2 = Pedro Pablo Kuczynski

| party2 = Peruvians for Change

| color2 =

| last_election2 = New

| seats2 = 18

| percentage2 = 16.46

| leader3 = Marco Arana

| party3 = Broad Front (Peru)

| percentage3 = 13.94

| last_election3 = New

| seats3 = 20

| leader4 = César Acuña

| party4 = APP

| color4 = #1155cc

| last_election4 = 2

| seats4 = 9

| percentage4 = 9.23

| party5 = Popular Alliance (Peru)

| leader5 = Alan García

| last_election5 = 4

| seats5 = 5

| percentage5 = 8.31

| leader6 = Mesías Guevara

| party6= Popular Action (Peru)

| last_election6 = 5

| seats6 = 5

| percentage6 = 7.20

| map = File:Elecciones parlamentarias de Perú de 2016 - Resultados.svg

| map_size = 350px

| map_caption = Results of the Congressional election

}}}}}}{{Politics of Peru}}

General elections were held in Peru on 10 April 2016 to determine the president, vice-presidents, composition of the Congress of the Republic of Peru and the Peruvian representatives of the Andean Parliament.

In the race for the presidency, incumbent President Ollanta Humala was ineligible for re-election due to constitutional term limits. Popular Force candidate Keiko Fujimori, daughter of former President Alberto Fujimori, was the leading candidate in the first round with almost 40 per cent of the vote, but fell short of the 50 per cent majority required to avoid a second round. Peruvians for Change candidate Pedro Pablo Kuczynski narrowly beat Broad Front candidate Verónika Mendoza to finish in second and earn a place in the second round. The run-off was held on 5 June 2016. With support from those opposing Fujimori, Kuczynski won by a narrow margin of less than half a percentage point, making this the first presidential election since 2000 in which the previous election's runner-up candidate failed to secure election. He was sworn in as President on 28 July.

In the Congressional elections, Popular Force won in a landslide, receiving more than a third of the vote and winning an absolute majority of 73 out of 130 seats. Broad Front with 20 seats and Peruvians for Change with 18 seats emerged as the main opposition blocs.

Background

On 13 November 2015, incumbent President Ollanta Humala called for a general election to be held on 10 April 2016. He said that he would respect the constitutional term limit restrictions and would not run again.{{cite news|title=Ollanta Humala convoca a elecciones generales para el 2016|url=http://elcomercio.pe/politica/elecciones/ollanta-humala-convoca-elecciones-generales-2016-noticia-1855996|work=El Comercio|date=13 November 2015|language=es}}

Electoral system

The President was elected using the two-round system. The 130 members of the Congress of the Republic were elected in 25 multi-member constituencies using open list proportional representation.[http://www.electionguide.org/countries/id/170/ Peru] IFES

Presidential nominees

=Campaign highlights=

The presidential tickets were to be filed with the National Office of Electoral Processes (ONPE) by 10 January 2016. Congressional lists were to be filed with the ONPE by 10 February 2016.

In March 2016, presidential candidates Julio Guzmán from All for Peru and César Acuña Peralta from Alliance for Progress were barred from the elections; Guzmán due to a violation of party rules in the party's internal election and Acuña Peralta due to monetary giveaways during a campaign rally, a violation of an electoral law enacted by Congress in November 2015.

Keiko Fujimori was a highly polarizing figure during the election. The daughter of the controversial former president Alberto Fujimori, who was serving time in prison at the time, she was popular among the poor and loyalists who credit her father with the defeat of Shining Path. This popularity allowed her to win in the first round of the presidential elections. She was viewed unfavorably by a number of people who oppose Fujimori for human rights abuses and corrupt practices, and who feared that her victory would mark a return of Fujimorismo. Mendoza, who placed third and could not stand in the runoff election, gave her full endorsement to Kuczynski, in order to prevent Fujimori's victory.{{cite web |url= https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/jun/07/kuczynski-set-for-victory-in-peru-election-but-will-he-able-to-govern|title= Kuczynski ahead in Peru election, but will he be able to govern?|author= Dan Collyns|date= 7 June 2016|work= The Guardian|access-date=22 May 2016}}

= Main presidential nominees =

class="wikitable" style="font-size:90%; text-align:center;"

| colspan="5" style="background:#f1f1f1; width:850px;" |{{large|Presidential tickets}}

Popular Action

| Popular Force

| Popular Alliance

| Peruvians for Change

| Broad Front

File:Acción_Popular.png

| File:Fuerza popular.svg

| File:Logo_Alianza_Popular_2016.jpg

| File:Peruanos Por el Kambio.png

| File:Logo-frente-amplio-Peru-alt.svg

style="width:160px; font-size:120%; background:{{party color|Popular Action (Peru)}};"| Alfredo Barnechea

! style="width:160px; font-size:120%; background:#FF8000;"| Keiko Fujimori

! style="width:160px; font-size:120%; background:{{party color|American Popular Revolutionary Alliance}};"| Alan García

! style="width:160px; font-size:120%; background:#E2007A;"| Pedro Pablo Kuczynski

! style="width:160px; font-size:120%; background:#49b848;"| Verónika Mendoza

File:Barnechea.jpg

| File:Keiko Fujimori 2 (cropped).jpg

| File:Alan García 2008.jpg

| File:Pedro Pablo Kuczynski Godard.jpg

| File:Verónika Mendoza Frisch.jpg

Member of Congress
(1985–1990)

| Member of Congress
(2006–2011)

| President of Peru
(1985–1990 / 2006–2011)

| President of the Council of Ministers
(2005–2006)

| Member of Congress
(2011–2016)

colspan="5" style="background:#f1f1f1; width:850px;" |Running mates
1st: Víctor A. García Belaúnde
2nd: Edmundo del Águila

| 1st: José Chlimper
2nd: Vladimiro Huaroc

| 1st: Lourdes Flores
2nd: David Salazar

| 1st: Martín Vizcarra
2nd: Mercedes Aráoz

| 1st: Marco Arana
2nd: Alan Fairlie

= Minor presidential nominees =

=Withdrawn nominees=

class="wikitable"

|+

style="background:#ddd;"

!| Party

! colspan=3 | Ticket

! colspan=2 | Withdrawal

style="background:#eee;"

! Name

! for President

! for First Vice President

! for Second Vice President

! Date

! Motive

Always Together
Siempre Unidos

|Felipe Castillo

|Guillermo Ruiz

|Isaac Humala

| rowspan="2" |10 February 2016

|Internal party disputes.{{cite web|url=https://larepublica.pe/politica/740339-felipe-castillo-renuncia-candidatura-presidencial/|title=Felipe Castillo renuncia a candidatura presidencial|date=10 February 2016|first=Plataforma|last=La República|website=larepublica.pe|access-date=19 February 2021}}

Peru Secure Homeland
Perú Patria Segura

|Renzo Reggiardo

|Carlos Vicente Marca

|Miluska Carrasco

|Nominee claimed lack of credibility in the electoral process.{{cite web|url=https://elcomercio.pe/politica/elecciones/renzo-reggiardo-renuncio-candidatura-presidencia-392616-noticia/|title=Renzo Reggiardo renunció a su candidatura a la presidencia|date=19 February 2016|first=Redacción|last=El Comercio|website=elcomercio.pe|access-date=19 February 2021}}

Peruvian Nationalist Party
Partido Nacionalista Peruano

|Daniel Urresti

|Susana Villarán

|Maciste Díaz

|11 March 2016

|Party filed for withdrawal in order to preserve party registration.{{cite web|url=https://elcomercio.pe/politica/elecciones/partido-nacionalista-retira-candidatura-daniel-urresti-noticia-1885693/|title=Partido Nacionalista retiró la candidatura de Daniel Urresti|date=11 March 2016|first=Redacción|last=El Comercio|website=elcomercio.pe|access-date=19 February 2021}}

Libertarian Perú
Perú Libertario

|Vladimir Cerrón

|Jorge Paredes Terry

|Jesús Zárate

|24 March 2016

|In protest of the National Jury of Elections for not disqualifying Keiko Fujimori.{{cite web |url=http://elcomercio.pe/politica/elecciones/vladimir-cerron-se-retiro-contienda-electoral-noticia-1889086 |title=Vladimir Cerrón abandonó las Elecciones Generales del 2016 |work=El Comercio |language=es |date=24 March 2016 |access-date=24 March 2016}}

Peruvian Humanist Party
Partido Humanista Peruano

|Yehude Simon

|Rosa Mavila

|Yorka Gamarra

|28 March 2016

|Party filed for withdrawal in order to preserve party registration.{{cite web |url=http://larepublica.pe/politica/751998-yehude-simon-anuncia-retiro-de-su-candidatura-presidencial|title=Yehude Simon anuncia retiro de su candidatura presidencial |work=La República |language=es |date=28 March 2016 |access-date=28 March 2016}}

Peru Nation
Perú Nación

|Francisco Diez Canseco

|Claudio Zolla

|Margarita Gamboa

| rowspan="2" |29 March 2016

|Party filed for withdrawal in order to preserve party registration.{{cite web |url=http://elcomercio.pe/politica/elecciones/francisco-diez-canseco-renuncio-su-candidatura-presidencial-noticia-1890062 |title=Francisco Diez-Canseco renunció a su candidatura presidencial |work=El Comercio|language=es |date=29 March 2016 |access-date=29 March 2016}}

National Solidarity
Solidaridad Nacional

|Hernando Guerra García

|José Luna

|Gustavo Rondón

|Party filed for withdrawal in order to preserve party registration.{{cite web |url=http://elcomercio.pe/politica/elecciones/solidaridad-nacional-retira-candidatura-nano-guerra-garcia-noticia-1890132 |title=Solidaridad Nacional retira candidatura de Nano Guerra García |work=El Comercio|language=es |date=29 March 2016 |access-date=29 March 2016}}

=Disqualified nominees=

class="wikitable"

|+

style="background:#ddd;"

!| Party

! colspan=3 | Ticket

! colspan=2 | Disqualification

style="background:#eee;"

! Name

! for President

! for First Vice President

! for Second Vice President

! Date

! Motive

Alliance for the Progress of Peru
Alianza para el Progreso del Perú

|César Acuña

|Anel Townsend

|Humberto Lay

|9 March 2016

|Disqualified for attempted vote buying in campaign trail.

All for Peru
Todos por el Perú

|Julio Guzmán

|Juana Umasi

|Carolina Lizárraga

|9 March 2016

|Disqualified for irregularities in nomination process.{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-35768068|title=Peru presidential candidates Guzman and Acuna banned from election|publisher=BBC|date=9 March 2016|access-date=2016-03-09}}

Opinion polls

{{main|Opinion polling for the 2016 Peruvian general election}}

Results

=President=

The first round was held on 10 April. Exit polls indicated that Keiko Fujimori placed first in the first round of voting with approximately 40% of the vote, with Pedro Pablo Kuczynski and Veronika Mendoza each receiving approximately 20%.{{Cite web|url=https://www.web.onpe.gob.pe/modElecciones/elecciones/elecciones2016/PRPCP2016/Resumen-GeneralPresidencial.html#posicion|title=ONPE - Oficina Nacional de Procesos Electorales|website=www.web.onpe.gob.pe|language=es|access-date=2018-11-23}}{{Cite news|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-36011844|title=Peru election: Keiko Fujimori wins first round, say exit polls – BBC News|work=BBC News|date=11 April 2016|language=en-GB|access-date=2016-04-11}}

The second round was held on 5 June. Exit polls indicated that Pedro Pablo Kuczynski held a slight lead over Keiko Fujimori. As counting continued, the gap narrowed significantly. Preliminary results gave Kuczynski a 0.25 per cent advantage over Fujimori, with less than 50,000 votes between them. Approximately 50,000 votes were challenged during the count.{{cite news|title=Peru election: Kuczynski wins, but Fujimori has yet to concede|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-36495737|access-date=11 June 2016|work=BBC News}} Fujimori conceded the election to Kuczynski on 10 June.{{cite news|title=Peru elections: Keiko Fujimori concedes to Kuczynski|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-36505027|access-date=11 June 2016|work=BBC News}}

{{Election results

|cand1=Keiko Fujimori|party1=Popular Force|votes1=6115073|votes1_2=8555880

|cand2=Pedro Pablo Kuczynski|party2=Peruvians for Change|votes2=3228661|votes2_2=8596937

|cand3=Verónika Mendoza|party3=Broad Front|votes3=2874940

|cand4=Alfredo Barnechea|party4=Popular Action|votes4=1069360

|cand5=Alan García|party5=Popular Alliance|votes5=894278

|cand6=Gregorio Santos|party6=Direct Democracy|votes6=613173

|cand7=Fernando Olivera|party7=Hope Front|votes7=203103

|cand8=Alejandro Toledo|party8=Possible Peru|votes8=200012

|cand9=Miguel Hilario|party9=Peru Progressing|votes9=75870|color9=darkred

|cand10=Antero Flores Aráoz|party10=Order|votes10=65673|color10=#ADD8E6

|invalid=3393987|invalid2=1190079

|votes12_2=18342896

|electorate=22901954|electorate2=22901954

|source=[https://www.web.onpe.gob.pe/modElecciones/elecciones/elecciones2016/PRPCP2016/Resultados-Ubigeo-Presidencial.html#posicion ONPE], [https://www.web.onpe.gob.pe/modElecciones/elecciones/elecciones2016/PRP2V2016/Resultados-Ubigeo-Presidencial.html#posicion ONPE]

}}

=Congress=

Popular Force won in a landslide, taking more than a third of the vote and an absolute majority of 73 out of 130 seats. Behind them in opposition, Peruvians for Change with 18 seats and Broad Front with 20 seats. Other parties which gained representation in Congress include Alliance for the Progress of Peru (9 seats), Popular Alliance (5 seats) and Popular Action (5 seats).{{cite web|url=http://www.electionguide.org/elections/id/2679/|title=ELECTION FOR CONGRESO DE LA REPÚBLICA 2016|access-date=1 June 2016}}

{{Election results

|image=File:Congreso Peru elecciones 2016.svg

|party1=Popular Force|votes1=4431077|seats1=73|sc1=

|party2=Peruvians for Change|votes2=2007710|seats2=18|sc2=

|party3=Broad Front|votes3=1700052|seats3=20|sc3=

|party4=Alliance for the Progress of Peru|votes4=1125682|seats4=9|sc4=|color4=#1E5BA8

|party5=Popular Alliance|votes5=1013735|seats5=5|sc5=

|party6=Popular Action|votes6=877734|seats6=5|sc6=

|party7=Direct Democracy|votes7=528301|seats7=0|sc7=

|party8=Possible Peru|votes8=286980|seats8=0|sc8=

|party9=Hope Front|votes9=139634|seats9=0|sc9=

|party10=Order|votes10=68474|seats10=0|sc10=|color10=#ADD8E6

|party11=Peru Progressing|votes11=14663|seats11=0|sc11=|color11=darkred

|invalid=6557222

|total_sc=0

|electorate=22901954

|source=[https://portal.jne.gob.pe/portal_documentos/files/0555507c-f982-4f51-b0ca-34e0fa17fc73.pdf JNE]

}}

= Andean Parliament =

Only the three main parties obtained representation in the Andean Parliament, with Popular Force obtaining 3 seats (plus six substitutes) each, and Broad Front and Peruvians for Change obtaining only one seat (and two substitutes). Popular Force got the most votes, with 38.1% of the valid ballots. Former congressman Rolando Sousa of Popular Force obtained the most individual votes, with 407,811.{{Election results

|party1=Popular Force|votes1=3842651|seats1=3

|party2=Broad Front|votes2=1559027|seats2=1

|party3=Peruvians for Change|votes3=1505118|seats3=1

|party4=Popular Alliance|votes4=821492|seats4=0

|party5=Popular Action|votes5=807585|seats5=0

|party6=Alliance for the Progress of Peru|votes6=763792|seats6=0|color6=#1E5BA8

|party7=Direct Democracy|votes7=506108|seats7=0

|party8=Possible Peru|votes8=220790|seats8=0

|party9=Order|votes9=59318|seats9=0|color9=#ADD8E6

|invalid=8666467

|total_sc=

|electorate=22901954

|source=[https://portal.jne.gob.pe/portal_documentos/files/0555507c-f982-4f51-b0ca-34e0fa17fc73.pdf JNE]

}}

Notes

{{notelist

| refs =

{{efn

| name = EXCLUDEDFROMCAMPAIGN

| Excluded from campaign

}}

}}

References

{{Portal|Peru|Politics}}

{{reflist}}

{{Peruvian political crisis}}

{{Peruvian elections}}

Category:Parliamentary elections in Peru

Peru

General

Category:Presidential elections in Peru

Peru

Peru

Category:Pedro Pablo Kuczynski