Peruvian general election, 2011
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[edit] Background
This article needs additional citations for verification. (April 2011) |
Peruvian politics adhere to a multi-party system, in which no one political group has a majority in Congress. This has led recent administrations to form loose alliances while in office to govern effectively. Such multi-party system has been in place ever since the administration of President Alberto Fujimori (1990–2000), following his 1992 dissolution of Congress
The elections are organised by three groups. First of all the RENIEC (National Registry of Identification and Civil Status), they are in charge of maintaining the civil records. And by that they define who has to vote and who doesn’t. In Peru, all citizens aged 18 to 70 are compelled to vote, elections being discretionary past the age of 70. The real organization of the elections and also of all other referenda is done by the ONPE (National Office of Electoral Processes). The last organisation is the JNE (National Jury of Elections), they are looking into the legality of the elections and the campaign plans.
The positions to be elected are:
- Presidential Election
- President of Peru
- 1st Vice President
- 2nd Vice President
- Congressional Election
- 130 Members of Congress
- Andean Parliament
- 5 Andean MPs
- 10 substitute MPs
[edit] Presidential candidates
This article needs additional citations for verification. (April 2011) |
The left-wing politician Ollanta Humala is supported by the Peruvian Nationalist Party.[3]
The Aprista Party (APRA),[4] Fuerza Social[5] and Cambio Radical[6] do not have presidential candidates. The incumbent Alan García's American Popular Revolutionary Alliance is also not fielding a candidate in the election.[7]
Political Party or Group | Presidential candidate | Candidate for Vice President | Candidate for 2nd Vice President |
---|---|---|---|
Alianza Gana Perú
| |||
Fuerza 2011
| |||
Alianza Perú Posible
| |||
Alianza por el Gran Cambio
| |||
Alianza Solidaridad Nacional
| |||
Justicia, Tecnología, Ecología | |||
Partido Despertar Nacional | |||
Partido Fonavista del Perú | |||
Partido Fuerza Nacional | |||
Partido Político Adelante |
Political party | Candidate | Withdrawal | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | for President | for 1st Vice-president | for 2nd Vice-president | Date | Motive |
American Popular Revolutionary Alliance APRA | Mercedes Araóz Fernández | Javier Velásquez | Nidia Vílchez | 17 January | Internal Party disputes |
Social Force Fuerza Social | Manuel Rodríguez Cuadros | Vladimiro Huaroc | Elva Quiñones | 18 March | Mr. Rodríguez claimed lack of credibility of electoral process |
Keiko Fujimori campaign ran on support of the status quo free-market policies,[3] however she was seen as hindered because of her ties to her father Alberto Fujimori,[8] who is in prison for corruption and human rights crimes following a crackdown on the Túpac Amaru Revolutionary Movement in the 1990s following the Japanese embassy hostage crisis in 1996–1997.[3] In addition, her campaign has been criticized for vote-buying.[9]
Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, a former prime minister, is also known as "El Gringo" because he has U.S. citizenship[10] and is of European descent. His support was seen as limited outside Lima because of his support amongst the country's elite.
Ollanta Humala, who had once led a military revolt in 2000 that was quickly put down, softened what was seen as his anti-capitalist tone to look more moderate along the lines of Brazil's former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. He told a campaign rally that "We are willing to make many concessions to unite Peru, we are going to talk with all political forces. Social problems must be resolved through dialogue. Let's vote without fear." Voters were seen to vote against Garcia in order to have a "fairer division of Peru's booming economy – backed by rich mineral resources – a key issue for more than a third of the population still living in poverty." The other candidates tried to discredit him by saying he would increase state control over the economy, roll back reforms and jeopardise about $40bn in potential foreign investment over the next decade in mining and energy exploration. Moody's ratings agency also said that Peru's investment-grade credit rating would not be threatened should Humala win. Despite this the sol and the Lima Stock Exchange's flagship index main stock index fell over the two weeks before the first round of the election on speculation that Humala would raise mining taxes, increase state subsidies and/or tighten control of such "strategic" sectors as electricity.
Opinion polls conducted in late May 2011 showed Fujimori and Humala in a statistical tie in a runoff vote scheduled for 5 June 2011, with one point separating the two candidates.[11][better source needed]
[edit] Support for the second round
Some of the candidates and parties eliminated in second round have expressed their support for one of the contestants in the run-off election.Alliance for the Great Change candidate P. P. Kuczynski declared that he would vote for Fujimori,[12] as well as his running mate Máximo San Román and ally Humberto Lay (National Restoration), whereas Humanists' leader Yehude Simon declared his support for Humala.[13]
The Possible Peru Alliance and its candidate Alejandro Toledo also announced support for the "Peru Wins"-candidate[14] in exchange for a participation in Humala's aspired government.[15]
National Solidarity leader Luis Castañeda on the other hand uttered his backing for the Force 2011 frontwoman.[16]
APRA does not have a clear party line yet but former Prime minister Javier Velásquez inclined to Keiko Fujimori's side.[17]
Nobel laureate writer Mario Vargas Llosa, liberal presidential candidate of 1990 and opponent of Alberto Fujimori, stated the he would "never vote" for Fujimori's daughter and warned the nation of a "return to dictatorship" that came up with a victory of Keiko.[18] He, personally, would vote for Humala, "unhappily and with fear" but as the lesser evil.[19]
[edit] Debates
[edit] First round
Date[citation needed] | Host[citation needed] | Location[citation needed] | Moderator[citation needed] | Subject[citation needed] | Highlights |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
3 March | El Comercio | El Comercio headquartersLima | Juan Paredes Castro | Education, security, social inclusion and free subject | The eleven presidential candidates presented their proposals.[20][21] Alejandro Toledo won the newspaper poll.[22] |
13 March | Jurado Nacional de Elecciones | Colegio MédicoLima | Federico Salazar | Varied | |
3 April | Asociación Civil Transparencia | Sheraton HotelLima | José María Salcedo | Varied | Only the top five candidates are to be included. This has caused various criticisms from other candidates, who argue that the debate is undemocratic and exclusive. Political analysts agreed that the 5 main candidates didn't make new proposals.[original research?] |
[edit] Second round
Date[23] | Host[23] | Location[23] | Moderator[23] | Subject[23] | Highlights |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
29 May | Jurado Nacional de Elecciones | Marriott HotelLima | José María Salcedo | Varied | Presidential hopefuls Ollanta Humala and Keiko Fujimori squared off in a bitter final debate on Sunday in Lima, one week before general elections that will decide the Andean country's next president.[24] |
[edit] Presidential polls
[edit] First round
Date | Source | Keiko Fujimori | Alejandro Toledo | Ollanta Humala | Pedro Pablo Kuczynski | Luis Castañeda |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
January 2010 | Ipsos Apoyo[25] | 18% | 9% | 15% | 3% | 23% |
February 2010 | Ipsos Apoyo[26] | 21% | 9% | 13% | - | 22% |
March 2010 | Ipsos Apoyo[27] | 20% | 11% | 12% | - | 20% |
April 2010 | Ipsos Apoyo[28] | 18% | 12% | 14% | 2% | 22% |
May 2010 | Ipsos Apoyo[28] | 18% | 13% | 13% | 2% | 22% |
June 2010 | Ipsos Apoyo[29] | 22% | 12% | 13% | 2% | 21% |
July 2010 | Ipsos Apoyo[30] | 22% | 14% | 12% | 2% | 20% |
August 2010 | Ipsos Apoyo[31] | 20% | 14% | 12% | 2% | 20% |
August 2010 | Datum[32] | 20% | 14% | 12% | - | 19% |
August 2010 | Imasen[33] | 19.7% | 12.1% | 13.6% | 1.7% | 20.2% |
September 2010 | CPI[34] | 19.6% | 14.6% | 9.8% | 1.2% | 23.1% |
September 2010 | Datum[35] | 23% | 14% | 12% | 2% | 21% |
September 2010 | Ipsos Apoyo[36] | 24% | 16% | 14% | 2% | 19% |
September 2010 | IMA[37] | 25.2% | 19.3% | 11.8% | - | 20.1% |
October 2010 | Datum[38] | 24% | 16% | 11% | 1% | 26% |
October 2010 | Ipsos Apoyo[39] | 23% | 16% | 11% | 2% | 24% |
November 2010 | CPI[40] | 19.6% | 20.5% | 8% | 1.2% | 24.1% |
November 2010 | Ipsos Apoyo[41] | 20% | 20% | 10% | 3% | 24% |
December 2010 | IOP[42] | 22% | 22% | 9% | 1% | 25% |
December 2010 | Datum[43] | 22% | 26% | 10% | 2% | 21% |
December 2010 | IMA[44] | 22.8% | 28.6% | 9.1% | - | 21% |
December 2010 | CPI[45] | 19.3% | 22% | 9.8% | 3.3% | 24.6% |
December 2010 | Ipsos Apoyo[46] | 20% | 23% | 11% | 5% | 23% |
December 2010 | IMA[47] | 17.4% | 27.3% | 10.1% | 5.8% | 22.8% |
January 2011 | Datum[48] | 20% | 27% | 10% | 4% | 22% |
January 2011 | CPI[49] | 18.8% | 25.2% | 11.7% | 5% | 22.2% |
January 2011 | Ipsos Apoyo[50] | 22% | 27% | 10% | 5% | 19% |
January 2011 | Imasen[51] | 20.3% | 30.7% | 12.1% | 5% | 21.3% |
February 2011 | IOP[52] | 20.3% | 28.6% | 12% | 3.6% | 17.5% |
February 2011 | Datum[53] | 20% | 30% | 10% | 5% | 19% |
February 2011 | CPI[54] | 17.6% | 30.2% | 10.4% | 4.3% | 20.2% |
February 2011 | Ipsos Apoyo[55] | 22% | 28% | 12% | 6% | 18% |
February 2011 | IMA[56] | 20.7% | 36.5% | 11% | 4.4% | 19.9% |
February 2011 | Datum[57] | 19% | 28% | 11% | 5% | 19% |
February 2011 | Ipsos Apoyo[58] | 21% | 28% | 14% | 6% | 17% |
February 2011 | CPI[59] | 18.8% | 28.4% | 13.4% | 6.4% | 20.1% |
March 2011 | Datum[60] | 18% | 29% | 13% | 7% | 18% |
March 2011 | Imasen[61] | 19.2% | 30% | 14.1% | 6.4% | 19.6% |
March 2011 | IOP[62] | 19.3% | 26.6% | 15.5% | 10.6% | 17.3% |
14 March 2011 | Ipsos Apoyo[63] | 19% | 26% | 15% | 9% | 17% |
21 March 2011 | Ipsos Apoyo[64] | 19% | 23% | 17% | 14% | 14% |
20 March 2011 | Datum[65] | 17% | 20.2% | 18.5% | 12.7% | 15.5% |
21 March 2011 | CPI[66] | 20% | 20.5% | 15.7% | 14.9% | 17% |
25 March 2011 | Datum[67] | 16.1% | 19.4% | 17.6% | 17.5% | 15.5% |
27 March 2011 | CPI[68] | 19% | 18.6% | 21.2% | 16.1% | 15.5% |
27 March 2011 | Ipsos Apoyo[69] | 22.3% | 21.6% | 22.8% | 15.8% | 15% |
31 March 2011 | Imasen[70] | 17.6% | 23.9% | 21.9% | 16.9% | 13.8% |
1 April 2011 | Datum[71][72] | 16.4% | 17.4% | 21.4% | 17.5% | 12.6% |
3 April 2011 | Ipsos Apoyo[73][74] | 20.5% | 18.5% | 27.2% | 18.1% | 12.8% |
3 April 2011 | CPI[75] | 19.1% | 19.6% | 28.7% | 17.8% | 14.0% |
3 April 2011 | Imasen[76] | 18.2% | 20% | 25% | 16.5% | 11.6% |
7 April 2011 | CPI[77] | 21.5% | 15% | 29% | 19.3% | |
7 April 2011 | Ipsos Apoyo[78] | 21.4% | 18.2% | 28% | 18.4% | |
8 April 2011 | Datum[79] | 22.3% | 15.3% | 31.9% | 17.3% |
[edit] Second round
Date | Source | Ollanta Humala | Keiko Fujimori |
---|---|---|---|
24 April 2011 | Ipsos Apoyo[82] | 42% | 36% |
28 April 2011 | CPI[83] | 40.6% | 36.8% |
29 April 2011 | Datum[84][85] | 41.5% | 40.3% |
4 May 2011 | Ipsos Apoyo[86] | 39% | 38% |
7 May 2011 | IOP – PUCP[87] | 40.7% | 40.5% |
8 May 2011 | Ipsos Apoyo[88] | 39% | 41% |
12 May 2011 | Datum[89] | 37.9% | 40.6% |
15 May 2011 | CPI[90] | 47.1% | 52.9% |
15 May 2011 | Ipsos Apoyo[91] | 48.9% | 51.1% |
15 May 2011 | Datum[92] | 40.2% | 46% |
19 May 2011 | Datum[93] | 41.8% | 45.4% |
22 May 2011 | Ipsos Apoyo[94] | 39% | 43% |
22 May 2011 | CPI[95] | 46.3% | 53.7% |
26 May 2011 | Datum[96] | 47.1% | 52.9% |
27 May 2011 | IOP – PUCP[97] | 42.3% | 42.8% |
29 May 2011 | Ipsos Apoyo[98] | 49.5% | 50.5% |
29 May 2011 | CPI[99] | 48.2% | 51.8% |
29 May 2011 | Datum[100] | 47.7% | 52.3% |
1 June 2011 | Datum[101] | 49.4% | 50.6% |
1 June 2011 | Ipsos Apoyo[101] | 48.9% | 51.1% |
2 June 2011 | CPI[101] | 50.5% | 49.5% |
2 June 2011 | IOP – PUCP[101] | 51.8% | 48.2% |
3 June 2011 | Datum[102] | 50.8% | 49.2% |
4 June 2011 | Ipsos Apoyo[103] | 51.9% | 48.1% |
5 June 2011 | Ipsos Apoyo[103] | 52.7% | 47.3% |
[edit] Results
- Presidential
For the Second round. ONPE, 99.99% of acts processed:[1]
Candidates – Parties | 1st round | 2nd round | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Votes | % | ||
Ollanta Humala – Peru Wins (Gana Perú) | 4,643,064 | 31.699 | 7,937,704 | 51.449 | |
Keiko Fujimori – Force 2011 (Fuerza 2011) | 3,449,595 | 23.551 | 7,490,647 | 48.551 | |
Pedro Pablo Kuczynski – Alliance for the Great Change (Alianza por el Gran Cambio) | 2,711,450 | 18.512 | |||
Alejandro Toledo – Possible Peru (Perú Posible) | 2,289,561 | 15.631 | |||
Luis Castañeda – National Solidarity (Solidaridad Nacional) | 1,440,143 | 9.832 | |||
José Ñique de la Puente – Fonavist Party (Partido Fonavista del Perú) | 37,011 | 0.253 | |||
Ricardo Noriega – National Awakening Party (Partido Despertar Nacional) | 21,574 | 0.147 | |||
Rafael Belaúnde Aubry – Forward Party (Partido Político Adelante) | 17,301 | 0.118 | |||
Juliana Reymer – National Force Party (Partido Fuerza Nacional) | 16,831 | 0.115 | |||
Humberto Pinazo – Justice, Technology, Ecology (Justicia, Tecnología, Ecología) | 11,275 | 0.077 | |||
Total valid (turnout %) | 14,074,682 | 100.000 | 15,428,351 | 100.000 | |
Blank votes | 1,406,998 | 8.855 | 116,335 | 0.706 | |
Invalid votes | 416,026 | 2.620 | 921,711 | 5.598 | |
Source: National Office of Electoral Processes (ONPE), National Office of Electoral Processes (ONPE) |
- Congressional
Parties | Congress | Andean Parliament | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % (Valid) | Seats | Votes | % (Valid) | Seats | ||
Peru Wins (Gana Perú)dominated by Peruvian Nationalist Party (Partido Nacionalista Peruano)
| 3,245,003 | 25.274 | 47 | 2,740,106 | 27.022 | 2 | |
Force 2011 (Fuerza 2011)
| 2,948,781 | 22.967 | 37 | 2,353,660 | 23.211 | 1 | |
Electoral Alliance Possible Peru (Alianza Electoral Perú Posible)
| 1,904,180 | 14.831 | 21 | 1,498,783 | 14.780 | 1 | |
Alliance for the Great Change (Alianza por el Gran Cambio)
| 1,851,080 | 14.417 | 12 | 1,413,783 | 13.942 | 1 | |
National Solidarity Alliance (Alianza Solidaridad Nacional)
| 1,311,766 | 10.217 | 9 | 954,618 | 9.414 | 0 | |
American Popular Revolutionary Alliance (Partido Aprista Peruano) | 825,030 | 6.426 | 4 | 638,675 | 6.298 | 0 | |
Radical Change (Cambio Radical) | 347,475 | 2.706 | 0 | 195,441 | 1.927 | 0 | |
Fonavist Party (Fonavistas des Perú) | 170,052 | 1.324 | 0 | 158,877 | 1.567 | 0 | |
Decentralist Party Social Force (Partido Decentralista Fuerza Social) | 108,200 | 0.843 | 0 | 65,265 | 0.644 | 0 | |
Forward Party (Partido Político Adelante) | 42,276 | 0.329 | 0 | 36,193 | 0.357 | 0 | |
National Force Party (Partido Fuerza Nacional) | 37,633 | 0.293 | 0 | 35,014 | 0.345 | 0 | |
National Awakening Party (Partido Despertar Nacional) | 30,190 | 0.235 | 0 | — | — | — | |
Justice, Technolgy, Ecology (Justicia, Tecnologia, Ecologia) | 17,478 | 0.136 | 0 | 49,869 | 0.492 | 0 | |
Valid votes | 12,839,144 | 100.000 | 130 | 10,140,284 | 100.000 | 5 | |
Blank votes | 4,352,212 | 26.056 | |||||
Invalid votes | 2,210,919 | 13.236 | |||||
Source: National Office of Electoral Processes - on Congressional Election- on Andean Parliament Election |
- Andean parliament
[edit] Reactions
This section requires expansion. (July 2011) |
- States
- Bolivia – After the first-round, President Evo Morales sent a letter to Humala congratulating him and said of the those who voted for him did so "to advance with the transformation of their nation and its institutions...Receive in my name, from the government and from the Bolivian people, a fraternal and revolutionary salute."[106]
- Colombia – President Juan Manuel Santos called Humala the next day to congratulate him for his "victory in the electoral vote that consolidates the Peruvian democracy. Santos reiterated Colombia's commitment to continue working at the strengthening of relations between the two countries and of all Latin America."[107] This was despite concerns in Colombia of being "surrounded by lefitists."[108]
- Finance Minister Juan Carlos Echeverry said that a merger between the two countries' stock exchanges was unlikely to be affected. He also said that Humala could "prove the markets wrong" in reference to concerns over former Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva's electoral victory. However, the Bogotá Stock Exchange indices also fell.[109]
- Economic
[edit] Government formation
Former president Alejandro Toledo was set to be in talk with Humala to join his government in some form. However, in mid-July he quit the talks, though he said legislators from their two parties would vote together on some issues.[111]About a week before his inauguration Humala introduced a cabinet line-up that was positively received by financial markets and the business community because most appointees were read as "moderate" and "establishment" figures who thus allayed apparent fears of radical change. His cabinet line-up includes:
On 18 August, the cabinet authorised the creation of the Ministry of Development and Social Inclusion whose function would be to implement the social programmes of the government to promote "social inclusion." The ministry was created to turn the social programmes into productive tools for the benefit of the poor and that one of its objectives would be to create the conditions so that beneficiaries of the Juntos[clarification needed] programme use subsidies for "financial leverage" so as to improve their quality of life.[121]
As a result of Humala's appointees, which came in contrast to concerns he would introduce changes that could hurt Peru's economic growth, Peru's sol-denominated bonds increased as yields fell from 7.84 percent for maturities in due in August 2020 to 6.12 percent. The bond prices gained 0.29 centimo to 111.78 centimos per sol, the highest since 23 February.[114] Carlos Herrera said that Peru would seek a mining windfall tax after consultations with companies.[122]
- Reaction
However, his softening stance on regulating and taxing the mining sector[127] caused consternation amongst some of his original supporters. Mario Huaman, the head of the General Workers’ Confederation (the largest labour union in Peru, who also endorsed Humala) said that: "We’re worried. We’ll listen very carefully to what he says in the coming days and see if he shares our views. Then we’ll decide our plan of action, our plan to fight. He promised change." Renee Ramirez, the general secretary of the Education Workers Union said that: "The new government has built up such great hopes that if it doesn’t follow through there’ll be a big divorce. We’re not going to keep quiet. We threw our weight behind Humala but we didn’t write him a blank check."
Alvaro Vargas Llosa, a senior fellow at the Washington, D.C.-based Independent Institute and son of Mario Vargas Llosa said that "He has to find a way to keep the base close while not letting it dictate economic policy." Erasto Almeida, a political analyst at Eurasia Group added that if his opinion rating drops further or the economy slows that Humala "could be tempted later on in his mandate" to adopt less market-friendly policies.[114]
Indigenous groups, such as AIDESEP in the Amazon, have expressed disappointment with Humala's move away from the left amidst his campaign promises to champion the Inca empire. They cited such reasons as Humala plan to go through with a Garcia-era proposal to bring in up to US$20 billion in the next five years, US$6.2 billion of which Garcia had already lined-up, for such measures as oil exploration in the Amazon. Alberto Pizango, the head AIDESEP, said that "The [indigenous] communities had entrusted this government to oversee a real, profound change. But Humala has altered his discourse, leading the people to say this government will just be more of the same." He also criticised the appointment of Herrera because of the latters approval of petroleum concessions when he first held the ministerial post in 2000.[128]
Former President Alan García chaired his final cabinet meeting on 27 July.[129] At the he said:[130]
I wanted to thank all of the ministers, also the regional presidents have put in a great deal of effort into their jobs, and mayors who are those who develop directly and closely with the people. [I am convinced that] when you put zeal asside, history will recognise what these ministers achieved with their effort. Much will have to be done for our country, but I think that the path chosen was the correct one, and the perseverance and the dedication was necessary. A salute to Peru, to the youth of Peru, to the poor of Peru, to the authorities of Peru, and as a follower of Haya de La Torre all I wanted to do was make a government that gives bread with freedom. A salute to Peru, to it's future and success."
[edit] Inauguration
Prior to his inauguration on 28 July, Humala's popularity fell in opinion polls after he suspended his brother Alexis Humala from Gana Peru following allegations of corruption in relation to deals with Gazprom. His approval rating of 70% fell to 41%.[131]For inauguration day itself Lima's main downtown square was scheduled to be open without security restrictions. Javier Sanguinetti, police chief for the Lima region, said that his office was working with the tourism police department and that 10,000 police officers would be deployed at popular tourist attractions around Lima on 28 and 29 July.[132]
Former President Alan García was not scheduled to attend the event because, according to him, the inauguration "is to hear the new president's message" and that although he attended Alberto Fujimori's inauguration in 1990 "there was such unrest in congress, because of my presence, that I’d rather focus on my health, and say ‘Let the new president give his message freely, let's not vent our frustrations in front of foreign heads of state.'" His critics read this as a snub to Humala.[133] However, foreign dignitaries such as Colombia's Juan Manuel Santos was scheduled to attend the event,[134] along with Brazil's Dilma Rousseff,[135] Uruguay's José Mujica,[136] Panama's Ricardo Martinelli[137] (and his wife First Lady Marta Linares de Martinelli),[138] Argentina's Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, Chile's Sebastián Piñera, Ecuador's Rafael Correa,[139] Bolivia's Evo Morales, Guatemala's Álvaro Colom, Honduras’ Porfirio Lobo,[140] South Africa's Jacob Zuma[141] and Georgia's Mikheil Saakashvili.[142] They would also be joined by Cuban First Vice President Jose Ramon Machado Ventura and his delegation,[143] Spain's crown prince Felipe, Prince of Asturias,[144] Secretary-general of the Organization of American States Jose Miguel Insulza, the U.S. ambassador,[139] the brother of South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, Lee Sang-deuk of the incumbent Grand National Party[145] and Chinese President Hu Jintao's special envoy Minister of Agriculture Han Changfu.[146]
Piñera, who was welcomed by outgoing Economics Minister Ismael Benavides[137] after his arrival at 23:00[147] said: "From the core of my soul, I want to wish President Humala the best of luck, as well as to the Peruvian government and the Peruvian people." Santos, who was welcomed by outgoing Prime Minister Rosario Fernández, said that "We consider Peru a true strategic partner on many fronts. Every relationship can be strengthened, improved. The relationship with Peru has been extraordinary, but we’re going to see how we can continue feeding it, strengthening it, improving it."[137] Machado Ventura, who was welcomed by the outgoing Minister of the Interior Miguel Hidalgo, relayed greetings and said that Humala electoral victory was an "example of the continuing advance of progressive forces in Latin America;" he added that the proposed a "nationalist programme" would "promote greater equity in the distribution of the country's wealth and that Cuba wishes him success in this effort." His delegation also included Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla, Deputy Foreign Minister Rogelio Sierra, the new Cuban ambassador to Peru Juana Martínez González and the outgoing Cuban ambassador Luis Delfín Pérez. The delegation was also invited Peru's commemoration of their 190 anniversary of independence.[148] The outgoing President Alan García hosted a reception for the visiting heads of state and foreign dignataries the night before the inauguration.[149] Morales and Piñera also scheduled a bilateral meeting on the sidelines of the event.[147]
Garcia left the presidential palace after he passed on the presidential sash to Humala.[150] Before wearing the sash, Humala also made a speech in which he promised "to fight for social integration, particularly of the poorest."[113] He also said that he would not alter the existing market-oriented policies and would keep trade policies intact; he added that he provide a minimum pension for all Peruvians over the age of 65 and raise the minimum wage. "We want the term 'social exclusion' to disappear from our language and lives forever. Economic growth and social inclusion will march together." In tackling social conflict and drug traffiking he said that the United States is a "strategic partner."[150] He also quoted South Africa's Nelson Mandela when he argued that there cannot be a democracy where misery and "social asymmetry" persist."[151] However, he broke with tradition when he did not travel to Congress to attend the inauguration.[150] During the swearing-in ceremony he was shouted down by the "Fujimoristas" (supporters of Keiko Fujimori and her father Alberto) after he said that was taking power" in the spirit of the 1979 constitution:[151] "The constitution of 1979, the last constitution of democratic origin, which many have not respected and that's why it has been forgotten, is for me a true inspiration for its national and democratic content."[144]
[edit] Initial initiatives
On 25 August, the Congress gave its vote of confidence in approving the Council of Ministers after Prime Minister Salomon Lerner Ghitis spoke to the Congress by a vote of 90 in favour, zero against and 33 abstentations, all of whom were from Fuerza 2011.[152] Tejada expressed his satisfaction and gratitude at the recognition of the "technical support" for the government's programmes and goals. "We call on Peruvians to be confident that President Ollanta Humala is setting the beginning of a new phase of growth with social inclusion in the history of Peru, respecting human rights and freedom of speech."[118] The initiatives were backed by the National Confederation of Private Business Associations (CONFIEP) as confirmed by President Humberto Speziani who said that "Overall we agree with all ten policies announced by the Cabinet, which is headed by Salomon Lerner. [Ghitis' goals are] "necessary to grow with social inclusion."[153]One of Humala's first tasks amongst his promises for social inclusion was to start the implementation of a two-stage 25% increase in the monthly minimum wage to 750 sol and unveiling a pension increase for those older than 65.[154]
Humala also sought to create a national flag carrier airline in cooperation with private investment, especially to such unprofitable domestic markets as the hinterlands of the Andes and the Amazon.[155]
During the first month of Humala's presidency, an agreement was reached with mining companies that would increase taxes by up to three billion sols a year however, Carlos Herrera said a new royalty rate had not been set as yet. Prime Minister Salomon Lerner Ghitis said that "this tax will not affect investment or companies' competitiveness."[156]
Amongst his initial social policies, modeled after Brazil during the tenure of Lula da Silva, were: a non-contributory basic pension of about US$90 per month for the elderly who lack other provisions, a state-run child-care programme, an increase in scholarships for poor students who want a university education and the expansion of a conditional cash-transfer scheme for the poor. However, he said that such programmes would be introduced gradually, hence, according to government officials, the cost for the following year would be a more moderate figure of US$275m.[157]
[edit] References
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[edit] External links
- Candidates
- Keiko Fujimori
- Ollanta Humala
- Alejandro Toledo
- Pedro Pablo Kuczynski
- Luis Castañeda Lossio
- Rafael Belaúnde
- José Ñique de la Puente
- Juliana Reymer
- Post-election
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