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Peru Congress removes President Jeri due to secret meetings with China

The Peruvian Congress ousted President Jose Jeri on Tuesday, just four months after he began his term. This was due to a scandal surrounding a Chinese businessman's?undisclosed meeting with him. This extended a cycle of political turmoil that has been sweeping the Andean country for the last decade.

75 legislators voted to remove Jeri from office, 24 against it and 3 abstained.

The new Congress head will be elected by the legislators. He will then assume Peru's Presidency, making him the eighth President in just as many years. Jeri's removal from office is the third time in a row that Peru has had a president removed.

The quick-fire removals show how Peru's political elite has failed to address concerns of voters like crime and corrupt practices. This has left the country in a vicious cycle of short-lived governments with little authority or time to deal with problems, and a Congress that is deeply unpopular and seeks to gain popularity by removing unpopular officials.

Ruth Luque is one of the legislators who supported the censure measure. She said that she wanted Jeri replaced with someone who would place public security and interest first before a new President takes office.

She said, "We want to put an end to this pain so that we can create the real transition that citizens hope for." "Not a transformation with hidden agendas, influence peddling, secret meetings, and hooded people. "We don't want this type of transition."

The 'volatility' of the situation could lead to a greater level of public distrust, as politicians and legislators try to position themselves as presidential candidates.

Michael Shifter said, "It seems to me that there's no high-mindedness in this case, only electoral calculations," a former president of the Inter-American Dialogue, a Washington-based think tank. "Enough legislators concluded that their support for Jeri could hurt them in the elections, so they were forced to act."

Last month, Jeri was seen arriving late at night in a restaurant wearing a hood for a meeting with Chinese businessman Zhihua Yang. Zhihua Yang owns a number of stores and concessions for an energy project. The meeting wasn't made public.

Jeri was elected president of Peru in October, after the unpopular Congress voted to remove Dina Boluarte. The right-wing parties who had supported her abandoned their support due to a growing outrage over crime and corruption scandals.

Boluarte did not have a vice president. Jeri was the next in line to succeed him. She was then the head of Congress.

The interim status was used on Tuesday to remove him as president. Contrary to impeachment which requires a supermajority (87) of the 130 members of the legislature, Congress censured Jeri and stripped him of his title of head of Congress with a simple majority.

Jeri said that he would respect any outcome of the election.

VOTING ON NEW PRESIDENT ON WEDNESDAY

Fernando Rospigliosi is the current head Congress but has refused to take the presidency. As a result, the legislators must elect a new leader of Congress. This person will automatically become president.

Rospigliosi stated that parties had until 6 p.m. local to present their nominees and the legislature will vote on a president on Wednesday.

It would be similar to Francisco Sagasti ascending to the presidency of Mexico in 2020, after he had been chosen by Congress amid a political crisis and protests that followed?former president Manuel Merino?s five-day term.

There are expected to be dozens of candidates in the April elections. A recent Ipsos survey shows that a large portion of the electorate is undecided on who to vote.

The mining-heavy Peruvian economy is resilient despite the political turmoil. It has maintained a 3.4% growth rate in 2025, and a relatively low inflation rate of 1.7%. This shows how the economy remains insulated from political shocks. (Reporting and editing by Rosalba o'Brien, Alistair Bell and Rosalba o'Brien. Additional reporting by Cassandra Garrison.

(source: Reuters)