Lima, Peru — Peru’s Congress voted unanimously early Friday to remove deeply unpopular President Dina Boluarte from office as a crime wave grips the South American nation.
Lawmakers had set up a debate and impeachment trial late Thursday in the 130-member unicameral Congress after voting to accept four requests for a vote to remove the 63-year-old Boluarte from office over what they said was her government’s inability to stem crime.
They requested that Boluarte come before them shortly before midnight to defend herself, but when she did not appear they immediately voted to oust her. In short order, 124 lawmakers voted just past midnight to impeach Boluarte. There were no votes against the effort.
The shocking turn of events came just hours after a shooting at a concert in the capital inflamed anger over crime roiling the country.
Unlike eight previous attempts to remove her, almost all legislative factions expressed support for the latest requests.
Boluarte took office in December 2022 after Parliament used the same mechanism to impeach her predecessor.
The president of the Congress, José Jerí, a 38-year-old lawyer, was sworn in early Friday as the interim president to serve out Boluarte’s term. Elections are scheduled for next April and Boluarte’s term was to end July 28, 2026.
After Friday’s vote, Boluarte spoke on national television, recounting her administration’s achievements. “I have not thought of myself, but rather of Peruvians,” she said.
Minutes into her speech, the broadcast was interrupted to show Jerí’s swearing in.
Jerí said he would defend Peru’s sovereignty and hand over power to the winner of the April election.
Peru’s first female president was its sixth leader in just under a decade. A normal presidential term is five years.
Boluarte assumed power in Peru in 2022 to complete the term of then-President Pedro Castillo, who was removed from office just two years into his five-year term after attempting to dissolve the legislature to avoid his own removal. She had served as Castillo’s vice president before becoming president.
There were more than 500 protests demanding her resignation in the first three months of her presidency.
JORGE CERDAN / AFP via Getty Images
Plagued by scandals, her administration’s inability to address Peru’s incessant crime proved to be her undoing.
Boluarte had approval ratings between 2% and 4% amid accusations she’d illicitly profited from her office and was behind lethal crackdowns on protests in favor of her predecessor, the Reuters news agency reports. She denies any wrongdoing.
She’s been the subject of multiple investigations, French news agency AFP points out, including one of her alleged failure to declare gifts of luxury jewels and watches, a scandal dubbed “Rolexgate.” She also gave herself a large pay increase in July.
On Wednesday, she partially blamed the crime situation on immigrants living in the country illegally.
“This crime has been brewing for decades and has been strengthened by illegal immigration, which past administrations haven’t defeated,” she said during a military ceremony. “Instead, they’ve opened the doors of our borders and allowed criminals to enter everywhere … without any restrictions.”
Mike Segar / REUTERS
Official figures show that 6,041 people were killed between January and mid-August, the highest number during the same period since 2017. Meanwhile, extortion complaints totaled 15,989 between January and July, a 28% increase compared to the same period in 2024.
The country’s latest presidential crisis erupted after a man opened fire and wounded five people Wednesday during a concert by Peru’s most popular cumbia groups, Agua Marina.
Prime Minister Eduardo Arana on Thursday defended Boluarte during a crime-focused hearing before Parliament, but it wasn’t enough to dissuade lawmakers from pursuing the motions to get the president out of office.
“Parliament’s concerns are not resolved by addressing a request for impeachment, much less by approving it,” Arana told lawmakers. “We are not clinging to our positions. We are here, and we knew from the beginning that our first day here could also be our last day in office.”