Westminster is watching Lima. Not with the usual polite disinterest, but with genuine unease. Peru's presidential runoff is too close to call. And Whitehall knows it. The bets are off.
Sources close to the Department for International Trade tell me the UK's multi-billion-pound infrastructure portfolio in Peru is suddenly looking exposed. Think mining contracts. Think financial services. Think the quiet, lucrative deals that never make the headlines... until they do.
The two candidates couldn't be more different. One is a free-market technocrat. The other is a firebrand populist who talks about rewriting the constitution. The markets are already jittery. The sol is wobbling. And the bond spreads are widening. That is a familiar, ugly pattern.
What matters for Downing Street is not who wins, but the margin. A tight result means a weak mandate. A weak mandate means a paralysed government. And a paralysed government is the last thing investors want in a country with Peru's recent history of revolving-door presidencies. Remember the four presidents in five years? We remember. The Treasury remembers.
One Lobby insider put it bluntly this morning: "If this ends in the courts, we have a problem." He is right. Allegations of fraud are already flying. International observers are on high alert. A contested result could trigger protests, capital flight, and a long, grinding period of uncertainty. Just when the global economy thinks it can take a breath.
The Foreign Office is braced for the worst. I am told contingency plans for a diplomatic push are being drafted. The message to Lima will be: sort this out cleanly. But that is easier said than done when the gap is less than a percentage point and both sides are convinced the other has cheated.
For UK exporters, this is a nightmare scenario. Peru is one of the brighter spots in Latin America for British trade. We have built good will there. A stable Peru is good for British business. A chaotic Peru is not. The bets placed on political stability may not pay out.
The clock is ticking. The result could come tonight. Or it could take days. Either way, the odds of a smooth outcome just lengthened. And in Whitehall, that is a cause for quiet panic.










