count was concluded Feedback from the recent presidential election and began printing ballots of votes with the faces of the finalists for the second round of the June 5, leftist Ollanta Humala and Congresswoman Keiko Fujimori, said Sunday the electoral body.
Magdalena Chu, chief electoral office, said that as anticipated, the face of nationalist Humala, who finished first in the poll with 31.7 percent, is the right side of the card.
While Fujimori, a friend of the free market was second with 23.5 percent of the vote, will be the left side, she added.
electoral office said it processed 100 percent of the vote, which accounted for the 99.3 percent for the election and the rest, 0.7 percent-were filed comments, which will be resolved by the electoral boards.
Regarding the results for the 130-member unicameral Congress, the electoral body has so far posted a 79.4 per cent of the vote and Humala's party will have the largest number of legislators, but most, which bodes Parliament where pacts fragmented political governance will be vital to give the next president.
party wins Peru's Humala would have up to 44 lawmakers, while Fuerza 2011 Keiko Fujimori, daughter of jailed former President Alberto Fujimori - have up to 36 seats in the new parliament, according to preliminary calculations.
It is followed by Peru Possible party of former president Alejandro Toledo with 20 members, the Alliance for the Great Shift of Pedro Pablo Kuczysnki liberal, with 15 legislators and the National Solidarity Party, the former mayor of Lima Luis Castañeda, with 10 representatives.
The ruling APRA party, which had no presidential candidate, won only four legislators.
Presidential aspirants to contest the ballot, Humala and Fujimori, and began to try to forge agreements with rivals of the first round of elections to seek the support of nearly 45 percent of Peruvian voters did not choose these two applications .
Last week, the Peruvian stock accumulated losses of 8 percent, due to investor uncertainty facing the two candidates, particularly that of Humala.
Investors fear that Humala, who has softened his rhetoric on the radical left, reverse years of economic reforms, while many voters associate a candidate with his father sentenced to 25 years in prison for violation of human rights and corruption in his decade in power.
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