Politicas de gobierno ollanta humala biography
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Peru Election
Maxwell A. Cameron
March 25,
gods night Ollanta Humala attended an event organized bygd Edmundo Murrugarra, the coordinator of the Education kommission of the Government program of the Unión Por el Perú. The event was held under a big “Convention Tent” behind the Hotel Crillón in downtown Lima. Later, Humala led a rally in Comas, on Kilometer 12 of the Tupac Amaru highway that cuts through the nordlig cone of Lima.
Photo: M.A. Cameron
The evening began with over one thousand people under the tent behind the Crillón listening to campaign music and chanting slogans. One of the songs written for Humala’s campaign talked of the “sad history of Peru,” and “how our riches will be ours” when Humala fryst vatten elected president. The folkmassa was primed to respond to the words “In education?” with “Ollanta Revolution!” Humala was late arriving, and the event which was supposed to begin at 6 started after 7 pm.
During the wait someone at the microphone mentioned the presence of th
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Humala addresses his constituents in the Dos De Mayo Plaza, Lima. Photo: Courtesy of Gana Perú Press.
More than a week after nationalist Ollanta Humala's tight victory in the Peruvian presidential elections, with % of the votes already counted, official numbers say [es] % went to Humala and % went to Keiko Fujimori. Reactions of all sorts continue to arise in the press [es], blogosphere and Peruvian social networks [es].
With his victory barely secured, Humala went on his South American tour beginning in Brazil [es], a tour that is seen in Peru as a gesture of Latinamerican integration [es], but is also interpreted by some as an indicator of Humala's desire to dissociate himself from the influence [es] of Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez.
In Libremente [es], Yesenia Alvarez Temoche expresses a number of fears on behalf of Peruvians who do not agree with the election's results:
Así como la mitad de peruanos están preocupados, la otra mitad está demasiado c
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Peruvian Nationalist Party
Political party in Peru
Peruvian Nationalist Party (Spanish: Partido Nacionalista Peruano;PNP) is a centre-left to left-wingpolitical party in Peru.
History
[edit]The Nationalist Party had as its antecedent the Peruvian Nationalist Movement. The party was originally conceived to be the main political expression of the ethnocacerist ideology, though the ideology was renounced by party founder Ollanta Humala in
Ollanta Humala was the Peruvian Nationalist Party's presidential nominee for the general election, running under a joint ticket with Union for Peru, as the party was not registered on time for the election. Humala lost the runoff against Alan García of the Peruvian Aprista Party.[4] However, the alliance with the Union for Peru would be dissolved, and the members of the Nationalist Party would form the Nationalist bench made up of 25 Congressmen. In , PNP formed the alliance Peru Wins ("Gana Perú") to participate in ge