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From Fujimori to Toledo: The 2001 Elections and the Vicissitudes of Democratic Government in Peru

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2014

Abstract

Following scandals concerning extensive corruption, electoral fraud and manipulation by the security services, Alberto Fujimori's authoritarian regime collapsed in November 2000, throwing Peru into political turmoil. A fresh ballot organised in 2001 led to the election of Alejandro Toledo as president. Assessments of the Toledo administration's performance and the health of Peruvian democracy in the post-Fujimori period have been overwhelmingly pessimistic. Recent political developments are analysed to argue that such negativity is mistaken. Apart from recording strong economic growth, under Toledo civilian control over the military and intelligence services has increased markedly. Greater horizontal and vertical accountability has produced a more open polity. Citizen's rights are better secured. Despite ongoing problems, post-Fujimori a process of democratic ‘deepening’ has occurred.

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Articles
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Copyright © The Author(s) 2005.

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References

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8 Polling data from the Apoyo agency published in El Comercio, 23 April 2001, indicated that voter approval regarding the conduct of ONPE and the National Electoral Tribunal, both highly questioned organizations under Fujimori, stood at 74 and 71 per cent respectively. The president's personal standing registered 68 per cent, that of his government 62 per cent; a substantial 42 per cent wanted Paniagua to remain in office.Google Scholar

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19 El Comercio, 16 May 2004. The poll was conducted among electors in Lima.Google Scholar

20 Peru's deep ethnic and class divisions compound the negative impact of Toledo's personal foibles, for his behaviour is subjected to intense scrutiny and ridicule by a Lima-based media. Television and the press are staffed largely with coastal Spanish-speaking white or mestizo journalists of elite or middle-class extraction, who focus obsessively on the president's humble Andean peasant background. Toledo's accent and errors in syntax form the topic of extensive comment and generate much derision around dinner tables in well-heeled neighbourhoods. On occasions the abuse goes beyond the normal rough-and-tumble of everyday politics (one satirical piece labelled Toledo a ‘shitty half breed’). His red-haired partner is also targeted regularly, being referred to as ‘the raw carrot’, ‘the crazy carrot’, ‘the raging carrot’ and similar jibes. Fujimori would not have tolerated such mockery. It undermines Toledo's standing, but is an indication of greater press freedom.Google Scholar

21 Figures in this paragraph are taken from the Economist Intelligence Unit, Peru Country Report, January 2004.Google Scholar

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27 In the words of APRA veteran Armando Villanueva, ‘We want this government to complete its term and that's what will happen. Alan García has reiterated this when Toledo's approval rating has been very low and rumours of a conspiracy circulated’. Expreso, 18 December 2002.Google Scholar

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31 Collier and Levitsky, ‘Democracy with Adjectives’, p. 443. Peru's armed forces have contained various ideological strands since the 1930s and relations with civil society have always been more complex than one of straightforward repression (as epitomized by the Velasco regime, 1968–75). In the late 1980s some commanders moved beyond a ‘shoot to kill’ policy when confronting Sendero Luminoso, initiating a ‘hearts and minds’ strategy that involved minimizing civilian casualties and arming the population. Since the late 1990s the Ombudsman's office has been running courses on human and citizens’ rights among the military and police. An appreciation of levels of awareness on human rights can be attained from Eduardo Fournier, ‘Feliciano’: captura de un senderista rojo, Lima, NRC Corporación Gráfica, 2002. A former general in the intelligence services, Fournier headed the team that captured the leader of the dissident Sendero Luminoso faction that opted to continue insurrectionary politics after the arrest of Abimael Guzmán. On changes in counter-insurgency practices, see Taylor, Lewis, ‘Counter-insurgency Strategy, the PCP-Sendero Luminoso and the Civil War in Peru, 1980–1996’, Bulletin of Latin American Research, 17: 1 (January 1998), pp. 3558.Google Scholar

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34 One high-profile case of media control under Fujimori involved the owner of TV Channel 2, Baruch Ivcher, who was stripped of his citizenship and business in June 1997, after his station transmitted accusations embarrassing to the regime. In the run-up to the 2000 elections, Montesinos distributed $180,000 per week to buy support from the publishers of seven tabloids. The owner of national daily Expreso, Eduardo Calmell del Solar, was captured on video receiving a payment of $1 million from Montesinos in return for supporting Fujimori's third presidential campaign. Calmell and fellow members of the business community are in prison and facing trial, while others in exile attempt to keep one step ahead of Interpol.Google Scholar

35 O’Donnell, ‘Reflections’, p. 607. Advances and retreats have occurred in the reform of state institutions, with criticism regularly being made about the pace of change. However, momentum over the past three years has clearly been in a forward direction vis-à-vis the military, police, legal system, local government, fiscal management, tax collection and related areas of public administration.Google Scholar

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38 According to one report, 10 PP members of Congress intend to resign and join a new organization, Perú Ahora, established by parliamentarians who left in February 2003. See the anti-Toledo daily Correo, 28 June 2004. Such defections would make the Toledo government more dependent on reaching consensus with APRA and UN to pass legislation through Congress. The potential negative impact on governability led the executive to strive to consolidate the Acuerdo Nacional with opposition political forces during the first semester of 2004.Google Scholar

39 Throughout Latin America between 1996 and 2001, legislatures, parties and key state institutions have experience a collapse in public confidence. Peru forms part of this wider trend: one recent poll placed the approval rating of Congress at 8 per cent, the executive at 9 per cent and judiciary at 12 per cent. El Comercio, 15 March 2004. For the continent-wide data, see Marta Lagos, ‘Public Opinion’, in Jorge Domínguez and Michael Shifter (eds), Constructing Democratic Governance in Latin America, 2nd edition, Baltimore, Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003, p. 145.Google Scholar