Peruvian Elections and Politics: Boluarte era, political crisis continues (user search)
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  Peruvian Elections and Politics: Boluarte era, political crisis continues (search mode)
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Author Topic: Peruvian Elections and Politics: Boluarte era, political crisis continues  (Read 67180 times)
Hash
Hashemite
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« on: April 13, 2021, 08:17:38 PM »

Results by province (and districts for metropolitan Lima), shaded:



National results excluding expats atm: Castillo 19.1%, Fujimori 13.37%, López Aliaga 11.62%, de Soto 11.6%, Lescano 9.1%, Mendoza 7.8%, Acuña 6.1%, Urresti 5.7%, Forsyth 5.6%

Lima metropolitan area (province): de Soto 17%, López Aliaga 16.8%, Fujimori 13.6%, Mendoza 8.2%, Urresti 7.7%, Forsyth 7.3%, Castillo 7.2%, Lescano 6.8%

As always a pretty big difference between Lima v. the rest of Peru, and also the Costa v. the Sierra.

Apologies for the similar shading for lakes and López Aliaga.

De Soto and López Aliaga were both clearly the candidates of the urban/Lima upper middle-class, as can be seen with their results in districts like San Isidro in Lima. Castillo did very well in areas with large indigenous populations in the Sierra, with only a few exceptions like Puno (where Lescano is from, and won the province but not the department) and Cusco (where Mendoza did best, finishing second to Castillo), as well as his native department of Cajamarca. Acuña won the department of La Libertad where he was previously governor.

Castillo won in Lima province though. It’s metropolitan area (the capital) that didn’t even know who he was.

Metropolitan Lima is probably still 33% though.

Actually, he didn't. Those were exit poll numbers. Fujimori won the department of Lima without Lima province with 20.7%, with Castillo in second with 14.8% and López Aliaga with 11.9%. But Lima province made up 91% of the department's votes.
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Hash
Hashemite
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« Reply #1 on: April 13, 2021, 08:20:05 PM »

For comparison, last month I did this ethnic map based on 2017 census data:

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