Astounding Victory in Peru of Socialist Candidate for President


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By W.T. Whitney Jr. – Jun 13, 2021
In voting on June 6, Pedro Castillo, candidate of the Peru Libre (Free Peru) political party, defeated three-time presidential candidate Keiko Fujimori, daughter of imprisoned former president Alberto Fujimori. Five days later, with all votes counted, Castillo claimed a victory margin of 69,546 votes, or 50.2 % of the votes. Keiko Fujimori, who gained 49.8% of all votes, is charging fraud and demanding that 200,000 votes from rural areas be recounted.
Castilloâs narrow victory, yet to be officially validated, represents an abrupt shift from Peruâs norm of corruption, right-wing ascendancy, and political instability (such that in one week in November 2020, three presidents took office, one after the other.) Castilloâs unexpected first-round victory on April 11, with 16.1% of the votes, was unsettling enough to his competitors that almost all of them backed Keiko Fujimori in the recent voting.
In office, Castillo will face formidable obstacles: a hostile national press, a Congress that overwhelmingly opposes him, business and financial establishments in panic mode, and retired military figures threatening revolt. Additionally, Peruâs total of deaths attributed to climate change is the third highest in Latin America and its rate of deaths due to COVID-19 infection is tops in the world.
Under the auspices of dictator Alberto Fujimori (1990-2000), Peru turned to undiluted neoliberalism characterized by foreign profiteering from mining and oil and gas extraction and by privatization of healthcare and education. A long-established rural-urban gulf widened. Rural disadvantage, affecting Peruâs indigenous population in particular, provided the boost accounting for the victory of Pedro Castillo and his party.
The divide separates Lima, with 40% of Peruâs population, from rural districts, where Castillo scored overwhelming pluralities, some in the 80-90% range. Political attention to rural life from national centers of power, from Lima, has been sparse. Candidate Fujimori campaigned only fitfully in Peruâs countryside.
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Pedro Castillo, born in 1969 of illiterate parents, has taught in a rural elementary school since 1995. In 2002, he was an unsuccessful mayoral candidate. Earlier, Castillo had taken a leadership role in autonomous peasant patrols (known as âronda campesinaâ) responding to thievery and political turmoil. He gained prominence in 2017 for his part in a teachersâ strike. He and his family operate a small subsistence farm.
The Peru Libre Party, established in 2012, calls for nationalization of extractive industries, a new constitution, and respect for womenâs rights, including reproductive rights. It claims to be Marxist, socialist, and anti-imperialist â but not Communist. Campaigning, Castillo called for âNo more poor people in a rich country.â Keiko Fujimori based her campaign on fear as she associated Castillo with terrorism, communism, and Cuban and Venezuelan socialism. She extolled her fatherâs success in corralling the Shining Path guerrillas.
According to the Partyâs website, Peru Libre âoriginates from the provinces, represents Deep Peru, and is committed to people who are most in need ⌠Peru Libre has governed in the regions and [small] cities ⌠and firmly defends decentralization ⌠We are internationalists ⌠The Party condemns all types of imperialism ⌠interventionism, and foreign dependency.â
Peru Libre calls for the departure of USAID and closure of U.S. military bases. Castillo supports solidarity alliances such as the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States and the Union of South American Nations.
Vladimir CerrĂłn, a neurosurgeon educated in Cuba and Peru, founded Peru Libreâs predecessor party in 2012. He has served as governor of Junim Province, was briefly a presidential candidate in 2016, and continues as Peru Libreâs secretary general. Charged with corruption, CerrĂłn entered prison in August 2020. A judge annulled the charges against him on June 9, coincident with the election of Pedro Castillo.
RELATED CONTENT: Breaking the Stasis: The Left Writes a New Chapter in Peru
Defeated presidential candidate Keiko Fujimori was imprisoned briefly in 2018 on charges of taking bribes from Brazilâs Odebretch corporation to finance her presidential run in 2011. Presently she is under investigation on charges of money-laundering and obstruction of justice. From age 19 on, she served as âfirst ladyâ for her father who, having abandoned his presidency in 2000, is serving a 25-year presidential term on charges of corruption and human rights abuses.
The Peru Libre Party adopted the thinking of JosĂŠ Carlos MariĂĄtegui, founder in 1928 of Peruâs Communist Party. MariĂĄtegui endeavored to adapt Marxist thought to the rural and indigenous realities of Latin America. As explained by Gilberto Calil, whose report appears on rebelion.org, MariĂĄtegui held that Peruâs elite, concentrated in Lima, despised and oppressed indigenous peoples. The divide was such, according to MariĂĄtegui, that Peru lacked a ânational projectâ and a bourgeois revolution. Only indigenous peoples based on the land were potentially ready to advance social and democratic demands.
MariĂĄtegui insisted that any socialist revolution in Peru and Latin America would have rural and indigenous origins. Accordingly, Calil regards Peru Libreâs program as âcoherent ⌠in centering on concrete demands of Peruâs rural population: agrarian reform, social rights, education and healthcare.â
Featured image: Pedro Castillo

W.T. Whitney Jr. grew up on a dairy farm in Vermont and now lives in rural Maine. He practiced and taught pediatrics for 35 years and long ago joined the Cuba solidarity movement, working with Let Cuba Live of Maine, Pastors for Peace, and the Venceremos Brigade. He writes on Latin America and health issues for the People's World.
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