Ollanta Humala (UPP) 30.84%
Alan García (Apra) 24.35%
Lourdes Flores (UN) 23.56%
Gap between García and Flores: 0.79% (about 89,396 votes).
Solo 89 mil votos separan a García de Flores Nano
El Comercio Online, 17 de abril del 2006
No cabe duda que los próximos días estarán cargados de mucho suspenso en la espera de conocer los resultados oficiales de las elecciones generales. Según la más reciente actualización de la Oficina Nacional de Procesos Electorales (ONPE) al 90,36% Alan García (Apra) alcanza el 24,35% de los votos escrutados, mientras que Lourdes Flores (UN) tiene 23,56% con lo cual la diferencia entre ambos se reduce ahora a 89.396 votos válidos (0,79%). Ollanta Humala (UPP) se mantiene en el primer lugar con 30,84%.
Se informó además que el total de actas impugnadas hasta el momento es de 8.138, lo cual equivale a 1.627.006 votos.
Asimismo, se anunció que el escrutinio de votos en el extranjero se encuentra avanzado al 49,88%. De este total, el 58,81% favorece la candidatura de Flores Nano; 17,27% apoya a García Pérez y el 11,89% votó por Humala Tasso.
8 replies on “ONPE Presidential Results at 90.36%”
One thing needs to be made clear: In the report just issued by ONPE, there are 1580 unreported mesas. Of these 812 are from outside the country, and 712 are from a single district: Loreto. Only 56 are from the rest of the Perú.
In the mesas reported from Loreto (about two-thirds, but geographically concentrated with the district), García has a slim majority over Flores, about 4,500 votes, but neither of them are doing particularly well since Paniagua is coming second in that district. (Current results, from ONPE: Humala 30.6%; Paniagua 21.2%; García 16.2%; Flores 13.8%; Lay Sun 11%
Rici, Thanks so much for meaningful and clarifying information. Although Flores’ lead with the expatriate voters and the double U.S. voters has now moved to 41% she has now had 150,000 of the 250,000 expatriate votes counted. She is till behind by 81,000 votes with 100,000 left to count. She will be eliminated with the next count of about 36,000 votes. Garcia’s final margin will probably be about 55,000 votes.
We need to clarify something, a free market economy doesn’t mean whatever the SIMPLEtons (San Isidro, Miraflores, Peruvian Longtime Elitists) want. Every economic act of substance is heavily negotiated such as NAFTA with the U.S. or trade agreements in the European Community. The people’s opinion matters. That’s why the European Union constitution was thoroughly rejected. The people didn’t like it. Chavez has every right to renegotiate oil contracts and looks like a genius with oil at $70 a gallon. Humala and Peru has the same right to take care of the 82% indigenous population. You aren’t saying China, now the 4th largest world economy growing at 10% a year is not a free market economy? Get some forward-looking vision, will you.
Max, your posts are always going to have no credibility at all if you insist on using that infantile acronym. What IS being simple-minded is turning a whole group of people into one-dimensional cartoon villains.
Hey, although it is way reductionist, I get a giggle out of the SIMPLEton acronym. Funny stuff!
Victor
Boy, the SIMPLEtons don’t like it when it’s done to them. I’ve never seen a political process so full of name calling. Choledo, Fujimoto, etc. Still can’t get any meaningful information on the Humala campaign and what his timing is to make his important changes. Or how he will work with congress once he wins.
Hi:
Using data from ONPE (89.68%) I made a rather SIMPLE (I tried to use another word, really) calculation.
I took the Garcia`s votes (%) in each departament (first column), Flores`s votes (%) (second column), difference between (third), numbers of “mesas” remaining unreported or observed (fourth) and a product of the difference, the number of mesas remaining and an estimate of 150 valid votes for each one (fifth). I assume that the mesas will have the same tendence of the ones already calculated, (they were observed without a special patron, because of material error or ilegibility). Each line is for each department in alphabetical order (spanish), except Lima that was post at the end. (Please don`t think that using a negative sign for UN have political implications, is for discounting the actual gap)
The results:
%PAP %UN DIF Mesas Votos Estimados
21 13 0.08 100 1,200
31 16 0.15 227 5,108
13 10 0.03 23 104
15 21 -0.06 196 -1,764
7.2 9.7 -0.03 82 -308
21 14.4 0.07 522 5,168
30.8 30.2 0.01 340 306
14 11.6 0.02 265 954
10.8 8.3 0.03 69 259
17.5 12.6 0.05 164 1,205
34.8 20.7 0.14 223 4,716
14.8 16.4 -0.02 278 -667
53.4 15.9 0.38 389 21,881
37.2 18 0.19 230 6,624
16.2 13.8 0.02 906 3,262
21 15 0.06 21 189
26.3 15.6 0.11 0 0
27.6 11.4 0.16 58 1,409
32.2 20 0.12 497 9,095
19.06 8.4 0.11 289 4,621
21.85 14.9 0.07 200 2,085
22.7 15.3 0.07 53 588
22.1 23.3 -0.01 48 -86
25.15 18.6 0.07 98 963
21.8 34.3 -0.13 2856 -53,550
13,362
13,362 aditional votes for Garcia.
It is only an exercise, but it seems that Lourdes must have a bigger majority abroad if she want to win.
Bye
Karlo
Max, I’m no “elitist”. You have no right to lump me with any group of people you made up. I never “did” anything to anyone. But you keep reducing people who disagree with you to grade school teasing instead of writing any actual counterarguments.