Protesters in Peru fight indifference, demand new elections
Nearly a year after a president鈥檚 dramatic impeachment, Peruvians want to vote for their next president before the scheduled 2026 elections.聽
Nearly a year after a president鈥檚 dramatic impeachment, Peruvians want to vote for their next president before the scheduled 2026 elections.聽
Jarek Tello is outfitted with a megaphone and clipboard as he navigates a crowd of protesters in the capital鈥檚 city center on a recent afternoon. His mission? Gather enough signatures to push Congress to move up national elections, currently scheduled for 2026.聽
The lawyer and activist for Peru鈥檚 centrist Purple Party knows it鈥檚 a big ask: If elections are moved up, current members of Congress would lose their seats. But like many protesters here today, Mr. Tello argues that holding early elections is the only way to save Peru from an increasingly powerful clique of legislators that many believe is undermining the nation鈥檚 democracy.
Peru has churned through six presidents in the past seven years. But the nation鈥檚 political crisis worsened at the end of 2022, when Congress impeached then-President Pedro Castillo, a left-wing teacher with Indigenous roots who upended Peru鈥檚 conservative establishment when he won the 2021 election.聽Mr. Castillo鈥檚 removal came just hours after he illegally attempted to dissolve Congress and rule by decree in the face of a corruption probe.
The impeachment complied with Peruvian laws, but it unleashed protests in some parts of Peru鈥檚 Andean highlands. Mr. Castillo鈥檚 initial victory was celebrated in these areas as a historic moment of recognition for the nation鈥檚 long-ignored impoverished and Indigenous communities. His removal felt like yet another slight against these groups and has diminished the government鈥檚 ability to operate in these regions.
Some 80% of Peruvians want early elections, according to a July poll by the Institute of Peruvian Studies, a research group. As the crisis endures, legislators鈥 refusal to entertain requests for new elections has generated resentment 鈥 including in the capital 鈥 toward political elites, which in turn is making the nation harder to govern, experts say. Protests and roadblocks are expected to continue.
鈥淐ongress is only defending its own interests,鈥 Mr. Tello says. 鈥淲hat we are trying to do with this petition is to force [legislators] to respond to the will of the people.鈥
A lack of incentives?
In cities such as Juliaca and Ayacucho, the protests following Mr. Castillo鈥檚 impeachment were met with brutal force from police who used firearms on demonstrators and even shot bystanders, turning public opinion squarely against newly appointed interim President Dina Boluarte. According to Peru鈥檚 human rights ombudsperson, 49 people were killed by gunfire in protests that took place between December 2022 and February 2023. The demonstrations also hurt the economy and forced the government to close some of Peru鈥檚 famous archaeological sites.
Although the intensity of the protests has diminished, roadblocks continue periodically in the south of the country, and several marches were held at the end of July in Lima, coinciding with the celebration of Peru鈥檚 Independence Day.聽
Protesters say they are outraged with the lack of progress shown by investigations into the killings, which have not resulted in any convictions so far.聽But increasingly, citizen frustration is directed toward what feels like a democratic backslide prompted by Peru鈥檚 increasingly powerful Congress, which only has an approval of 6%, according to the July poll.
鈥淢embers of Congress are making laws for their own benefit and stopped representing us a long time ago,鈥 says Antonia Quisocapa, an Indigenous leader from the region of Puno who traveled to Lima to protest last month. She says President Boluarte should resign: 鈥淪he鈥檚 got her hands full of blood.鈥
Over the past six months, Peru鈥檚 Congress has struck down motions filed by Ms. Boluarte to hold early elections and advanced a law that would enable legislators to remove the judges who preside over Peru鈥檚 electoral system. Congress has levied questionable corruption charges against three of the seven magistrates that run the National Judiciary Council, which is in charge of appointing judges to courts nationally.
Rosa Mar铆a Palacios, an influential columnist and lawyer, describes these moves as an 鈥渁ssault鈥 on Peru鈥檚 democracy that is eroding checks and balances. 鈥淐ongress is using its powers abusively and in a totalitarian manner,鈥 she says.
There are few incentives for Peru鈥檚 Congress to approve a law that would activate early elections, says Ms. Palacios.聽Legislators are constitutionally barred from reelection here, which means if elections come early, they would be putting themselves out of work.
The latest effort to move up elections fizzled in February, as legislators disagreed over whether a referendum over a new constitution should also be included in an early election.
Ms. Boluarte, whose term goes until 2026, initially advocated for early elections. But, during a press conference that followed one of the July protests, she said that laws governing elections were out of her hands, suggesting Peruvians should instead complain over social and economic issues that her government could take action on.聽
But she could force new elections to take place 鈥 if she resigns. She has dismissed that as an option, saying she has a responsibility to fulfill her constitutional mandate and finish her presidential term. Ms. Boluarte was never voted into the presidential office. She was Mr. Castillo鈥檚 vice president and was sworn in after he was impeached. She had promised in gatherings with Mr. Castillo鈥檚 supporters that if the president were ever to be removed, she would resign.
鈥淚 think they鈥檝e seen that they can ride out the pressure,鈥 says Will Freeman, a political scientist at the Council on Foreign Relations who researches governance in Peru. There are other incentives for the president and many of Peru鈥檚 members of Congress to hold on to their seats, he says.
鈥淭hey definitely don鈥檛 want to be investigated鈥 for the human rights violations 鈥渢hat have been聽happening over the past six months,鈥 Mr. Freeman says. 鈥淭hat also explains the whole push to control institutions.鈥澛
No guarantee
Peruvians 鈥 particularly outside big cities 鈥 have become increasingly skeptical of all levels of government over the past six months, says Glaeldys Gonz谩lez Calanche, a Peru expert at the International Crisis Group. It鈥檚 harder for officials from the central government to implement health and security policies in partnership with regional administrations or municipal governments. On several occasions, government officials have had to leave villages or cancel meetings after locals pushed them away with rocks and sticks. Meanwhile, mayors from some towns in the south of Peru 鈥 where most of the killings of protesters occurred 鈥 have been reprimanded by their own voters for meeting with Ms. Boluarte and forced to make public apologies.聽
鈥淪ome people don鈥檛 believe that officials [from the central government] are real authorities any longer,鈥 Ms. Gonz谩lez says. 鈥淲hat we鈥檙e afraid of is that criminal groups could benefit from this chaotic situation.鈥澛
But many Peruvians have become 鈥渋ndifferent鈥 to the political situation, particularly in a nation where political protest has historically been stigmatized and linked to leftist rebel groups, says Ms. Palacios, the lawyer. The latest round of protests in Peru鈥檚 capital were much smaller than previous ones; an estimated 20,000 people demonstrated together on July 20.
鈥淚f you come out here to protest over the deaths of civilians, they start to accuse you of being a terrorist,鈥 says Ms. Palacios, who says a group of about 20 government supporters with megaphones recently showed up outside her home screaming insults at her for hours over her criticism in columns and on national radio programs of the Boluarte government.
Despite the lack of response to public frustration, some Peruvians are still hopeful they can pressure politicians to hold elections before 2026. Peru鈥檚 struggling economy could work in their favor.
The Peru Constitution allows citizens to present topics for congressional debate after gathering 76,000 signatures.
Mr. Tello, the lawyer for the Purple Party, and volunteers are setting up booths in the street several times a week and attending protests where they gather signatures for a petition calling for early elections. They鈥檙e even taking down the ID numbers and fingerprints of those who sign, to ensure that the petition can be legalized and, they hope, generate a public conversation among legislators.
So far, the group, which is also backed by a construction workers union, has gathered 37,000 signatures. Members are hoping to reach 76,000 by October.
鈥淭he success of this petition is not guaranteed,鈥 Mr. Tello says. 鈥淏ut we will put this issue on the table once again and force legislators to confront it.鈥