Two right-wing politicians lead in Peru's presidential race, but most are undecided, poll says

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  • Summary

  • Only late president’s daughter and former mayor poll above 10%

  • Nearly two-fifths of Peru’s electoral undecided or won’t vote

  • Hopefuls include a popular comedian, a wealthy businessman, and a retired general

  • Many Peruvian presidents removed ​before term ends, some jailed

LIMA, March 9 (Reuters) - Two right-wing candidates - the daughter ‌of a former jailed president and the former mayor of Lima - are out in front of other contenders for Peru’s April 12 presidential election, according to the latest poll, though many voters are either undecided or do not plan ​on voting.

Keiko Fujimori and Rafael Lopez Aliaga are the only candidates out of a record ​roster of 36 presidential hopefuls polling in the double digits. Fujimori polled at ⁠10.7% versus her rival’s 10%, according to a Datum Internacional poll released Sunday night on ​local TV, though roughly two-fifths of those polled either declined to choose a candidate or do not ​plan on voting in the first place.

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The scant support for the leaders suggests that a June 7 runoff is likely, which would be typical for the Andean nation, as no candidate has won in the first round since ​the end of the last century.

The job of Peru’s head of state has become a revolving ​door, with eight presidents since 2018. Four former leaders are currently behind bars. Its unpopular right-wing-controlled Congress removed its ‌latest ⁠president last month after he held secret meetings with a Chinese businessman.

Over 38% of voters polled between February 27 and March 4 were undecided or had decided not to vote, Datum found. Many of those who do vote will not decide until a week before the election, CEO Urpi Torrado ​said.

Fujimori, daughter of late ​former president Alberto Fujimori, ⁠who was imprisoned for 16 years for crimes against humanity - including the use of death squads during his decade-long tenure - is on her fourth run ​for the presidency.

She has been trading places in polling with Lopez Aliaga, ​an ultra-conservative ⁠former mayor who has embraced his nickname “Porky” for his resemblance to a U.S. cartoon pig, as part of his campaign. A fortnight ago, another Datum poll showed Lopez Aliaga in the lead with 13.4% and ⁠Fujimori at ​9.7%.

Other candidates polling around 5% include leftist Alfonso Lopez-Chau, ​a former central bank director; millionaire businessman Cesar Acuna; Carlos Alvarez, a popular comedian and impersonator of former presidents; and retired ​general and former intelligence chief Wolfgang Grozo.

Reporting by Marco Aquino; Writing by Sarah Morland; Editing by David Gaffen

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