LIMA, Peru — Peru's Congress on Tuesday voted to remove interim President José Jerí from office, triggering fresh political instability weeks before a presidential election.
Jerí was Peru's seventh president in less than a decade, and will now be replaced by a member of Congress, who will be expected to lead the country during the April 12 election and until the newly elected president is sworn in on July 28.
How José Jerí became Peru's president
Jerí, a 39-year-old lawyer, was elected to Peru's Congress in 2021 for Somos Peru, a small conservative party. He was the head of Peru's Congress in October, when lawmakers voted to remove then President Dina Boluarte from office as the nation faced increasing rates of violent crime.
Following Boluarte's removal, Jerí was elected by his peers as the nation's interim president, with the expectation that he would stay in office until July, when a new presidential term begins. But his mandate was cut short as corruption allegations surfaced against him and Congress grew impatient with his leadership.
T
he charges against Jerí
Jerí is facing a preliminary investigation for corruption and influence peddling launched by Peru's Attorney General's office earlier this year.