
Peru's electoral authority declares Pedro Castillo President-elect, 6 weeks after runoff
CNN
Six weeks after voters headed to the polls in Peru, former schoolteacher and union leader Pedro Castillo has been formally declared the country's President-elect. He will be sworn in on July 28, the bicentennial of Peruvian independence, election authorities announced Monday.
Earlier Monday, the National Jury of Elections (JNE) unanimously dismissed the final appeals filed by Castillo's opponent, Keiko Fujimori, regarding allegations of voting irregularities that were found to be unsubstantiated. The JNE said Castillo won the election with 50.126% of the vote. The two candidates were separated by just 44,263 votes -- a razor-thin margin for a country with a population of about 33 million. Castillo's running mate, economist Dina Boluarte, was declared vice president-elect by the JNE.
Canadians woke up Tuesday to an all-too-familiar troll ripping through their social media feeds. US President Donald Trump shared an image on Truth Social depicting him speaking to European leaders with an AI-generated map in the background, showing the US flag plastered over Canada, Greenland, and Venezuela.

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