The Andean nation, once a beacon of stability in Latin America, now finds itself at a crossroads. A surging crime wave, exacerbated by a fragmented political landscape, has turned Peru’s presidential election into a knife-edge contest. The two leading candidates, both promising a hardline crackdown on insecurity, are locked in a statistical dead heat. For British investors who have poured billions into Peru’s mining, energy and infrastructure sectors, the outcome is far from academic.
The catalyst for this electoral volatility is Peru’s escalating crisis of public safety. Homicide rates have spiked 30% since 2020, while organised crime groups now control swathes of the Amazon and coastal drug routes. Citizens live in fear: extortion against small businesses has become routine, and gangs have even targeted mayors and local officials. The government’s response, a series of emergency decrees that militarised policing in select regions, has done little to stem the tide. Instead, it has fuelled distrust in institutions, creating fertile ground for populist strongmen.
The two frontrunners, Keiko Fujimori and leftist Pedro Castillo, have both seized on this despair. Fujimori, the daughter of former dictator Alberto Fujimori, promises a ‘mano dura’ (iron fist) approach, including expanded military patrols and mandatory minimum sentences. Her platform resonates with urban middle classes who feel abandoned by the state. Castillo, a former teacher and union leader, takes a different tack: he advocates for community policing, investment in social programmes, and a purge of corrupt police commanders. His support is strongest in rural areas, where the state has long been absent.
British firms have substantial skin in this game. The UK is Peru’s third-largest investor, with holdings exceeding £15 billion. Major names like Anglo American, BHP, and HSBC have deep ties to the Peruvian economy. Anglo American’s Quellaveco copper mine, a £5.4 billion project that began production in 2022, is one of the world’s largest. The company has already faced protests over water rights and local hiring, and a new administration could embolden opposition. More broadly, the UK-Peru trade relationship, underpinned by a post-Brexit free trade agreement, depends on regulatory stability. A sudden shift in policy around mining royalties or environmental standards could unsettle markets.
Beyond economics, there is a digital sovereignty angle. As Peru modernises its government services, including a national digital ID system and biometric voter registration, the next president will decide which foreign tech firms get contracts. British companies like IDnow and Entrust are competing for this business, but a nationalistic administration might favour Chinese or Russian alternatives. Moreover, the campaign itself has been marked by disinformation: both camps have accused each other of using deepfakes and bot networks to sway voters. The new leader will inherit a fragile digital ecosystem that requires robust cybersecurity and public trust.
The tightening race reflects a deeper structural issue: Peru’s political class has lost legitimacy. Since the impeachment of President Pedro Castillo in 2022 (not the candidate, but the former president of the same name), the country has cycled through five leaders. The electorate is polarised and weary. A recent poll showed that 60% of Peruvians would emigrate if given the chance. The next president will need to govern without a legislative majority, making governance a fraught exercise in coalition building. For British diplomats and businesses, this means hedging bets: engaging with both camps while preparing for a messy transition.
In the end, the election will be decided by swing voters in Lima’s sprawling shantytowns, where insecurity is a daily reality. They want a leader who can restore order without tipping into authoritarianism. Whether Fujimori or Castillo can deliver that remains uncertain. What is certain is that the outcome will ripple far beyond Peru’s borders, shaping the operational environment for British firms and the broader geopolitical alignment of a critical Latin American partner.
The countdown to polling day has begun. The world watches, and British interests hang in the balance.











