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Peru president eyes blow to opposition in congressional polls

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AFP Lima

President Martin Vizcarra looks set to break the opposition stranglehold on Peru's Congress as legislative elections get underway on Sunday, the first time they have been held separately from a general election.

The vote comes just 15 months ahead of the next general election, and after Vizcarra successfully dissolved Congress in September in a bid to break a political crisis over repeated clashes with the Keiko Fujimori-led opposition.

Fujimori's Popular Force party held an absolute majority in the single-chamber legislature with 73 out of 130 seats, but on Sunday they are expected to suffer a drubbing at the ballot box, largely due to the wide-ranging Odebrecht corruption scandal that snared Fujimori in its tentacles.

 

Fujimori is accused of accepting USD 1.2 million in illicit party funding from the Brazilian construction giant Odebrecht for her 2011 election campaign.

Odebrecht has admitted to paying at least USD 29 million to Peruvian officials since 2004, and bribing four former Peruvian presidents.

"Popular Force thinks it can win 20-25 congressmen, but compared with the absolute dominion it had, it will lose a lot," analyst Luis Benavente, director of the Vox Populi consultancy, told AFP.

"Fujimorism will be the big loser in this election." Popular Force has been the major bloc in Congress since the last election in 2016, but Fujimori is expected to pay for being implicated in the Odebrecht scandal that saw her spend 13 months in pre-trial detention until she was released in November.

The 44-year-old daughter of jailed former president Alberto Fujimori (1990-2000) has seen her popularity plummet and she may even be sent back to pre-trial detention on Tuesday when she faces the courts once again.

"The election winner is going to be Martin Vizcarra, because he will have managed to change the hostile Congress of the last few years," political analyst Augusto Alvarez told AFP.

Popular Force's main allies in the legislature, the social-democrat APRA, have also been hurt by the corruption scandal.

APRA's ex-leader Alan Garcia, a two-time former president (1985-1990, 2006-2011) committed suicide in April as police turned up at his home to arrest him for corruption related to the Odebrecht case.

In a widely popular move Vizcarra dissolved Congress on September 30.

The opposition accused him of a "coup d'etat" and swore in Vice President Mercedes Araoz as "acting president," but she resigned the following day.

The opposition took its case to the constitutional court, which ruled in Vizcarra's favour.

Demonstrators took to the streets to support Vizcarra and his anti-corruption push.

Polls showed 90 percent support for the president's daring move.

Other opinion polls ahead of the election suggest there could be a hung legislature, with centrist parties expected to do well.

Vizcarra doesn't have a party himself but "will achieve a more bearable relationship with the centrist parties that achieve a majority in Congress," said Alvarez.

And he will need to as he requires legislative support for his anti-corruption reforms.

If centrists do dominate Congress, "Vizcarra won't have the same level of opposition that characterized his relationship" with the Fujimori-dominated legislature, said Alvarez.

The new lawmakers will sit for only 16 months until the April 2021 general election, and a new president is due to take office three months after that.

Neither Vizcarra nor any of the new lawmakers will be eligible for re-election in 2021, so only 16 of them are currently seeking re-election.

On Sunday there will be 2,300 candidates representing 13 parties, and for the first time an indigenous transgender candidate.

Although some 25 million Peruvians are eligible to vote there has been strong voter apathy this electoral cycle.

The vote "is to fill a void. The fall of the establishment and Fujimorism's loss of dominion means there's a clean slate in Peruvian politics," analyst Carlos Melendez told AFP.

Fujimori's Popular Force is nevertheless expected to win the second largest number of votes behind the centrist Popular Action party.

"It's hard to kill Fujimorism," warned Melendez.

Alvarez said the party "will be a relevant force." The election will be observed by the European Union and Organization of American States.

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First Published: Jan 26 2020 | 12:45 PM IST

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