Roberto Sánchez, a left-wing congressman and former minister, campaigns carrying a hulking straw hat — one that’s not his personal.
It as soon as belonged to Pedro Castillo, the jailed former president of Perú, who received the 2021 election in opposition to Keiko Fujimori, the conservative daughter of former dictator Alberto Fujimori, whom Sánchez can even face in a runoff election on Sunday.
The hat, together with Castillo, has turn out to be emblematic of the grassroots political motion that Sánchez could stick with it ought to he win the extremely polarized elections — at the same time as he makes an attempt to melt a few of its extra radical points.
Born in Huaral, a coastal province north of Lima, to a barber and a housemaid, Sánchez shined sneakers from age seven to 13. He went on to graduate with a psychology diploma from San Marcos College and holds a grasp’s diploma in social coverage.
His whole profession was constructed within the public sector together with as a congressman, minister of commerce beneath Castillo, and as president of the Juntos por el Perú (Collectively for Perú) political celebration since 2017.
Castillismo, a political motion named for Castillo, has its roots in rural land reform, anti-elitism, and left-wing populism. Some analysts argue that regardless of its chief’s incarceration for trying to dissolve Congress in 2022, the motion endures due to the social and financial realities of the nation.
“The vote for Castillo and Sánchez does have an actual underlying foundation. I might not describe it as a protest vote, however reasonably as a vote born out of desperation and abandonment. It’s the vote of Perú’s extraordinarily poor,” Hernán Garrido Lecca, an economist and former well being minister (2007-2008), informed Perú Reviews.
Based on Peru’s Nationwide Institute of Statistics and Informatics (INEI), 4.7% of Perú’s inhabitants — roughly 1.6 million individuals — lived in excessive poverty in 2025, unable to afford even a fundamental meals basket.
Poverty predominantly exists in rural communities within the Andes and the Amazon areas that stay largely disconnected from the financial and political heart of the capital Lima.
“Castillismo doesn’t reply to Castillo as an individual, however to what he represents — the protest in opposition to Lima’s centralism and the abandonment of the areas,” Catherine Lanseros, a Peruvian journalist, informed Perú Reviews.
Not like Castillo, Sánchez has sought to current himself as a extra institutional and pragmatic left-wing candidate.
He’s higher educated, extra articulate, and a seasoned politician; he made that distinction clear in final week’s debate, attacking Fujimori and her celebration, Fuerza Well-liked, for his or her function within the nation’s political instability in recent times.
In an effort to reassure moderates cautious of his leftist insurance policies, within the last days of his marketing campaign, Sánchez offered a 114-page authorities plan promising macroeconomic stability, respect for the Central Financial institution’s autonomy, and continuity of free commerce agreements.
Whether or not this represents real moderation or a last-minute political technique stays, for a lot of Peruvians, a defining query.
As Lanseros put it: “Regardless of what number of instances he rewrites his authorities proposal, Sánchez can’t deny his essence.”
Featured picture: Roberto Sánchez is operating for president of Perú in elections on June 7, 2026.
Picture credit score: Roberto Sánchez via X.
