Skip to main content

Peru after the soft coup: Between the wound and the conscience

By Jaime Bravo, Jorge Coulon 
 
Dina Boluarte's removal from office is not a victory for the people, but an internal readjustment of power. Congress did not obey the clamor of the streets, but rather the need to preserve a system that is crumbling from within. The fuse was changed so that the same machinery could continue to run: the pact between plutocracy, corruption, and fear.
Boluarte was useful as long as she maintained the order imposed after the fall of Pedro Castillo. Her dismissal now serves as a symbolic sacrifice to calm collective outrage. But the country has not awakened: it has only changed its executioner. The structure that allowed repression, unpunished deaths, and institutional degradation remains intact.
One of the factors that triggered this crisis—and at the same time turned it into an opportunity for the oligarchies—is the degradation of political parties. The new movements were not born as spaces for popular deliberation, but as extensions of personal fiefdoms without a base or program. In this vacuum, economic and media power found the perfect terrain to reorganize.
Today, it is easier to coordinate a mobilization than to lead a transition, easier to be outraged than to build an alternative. This organizational fragility turns each outbreak into a parenthesis without continuity.
The challenge, then, is not only to resist but to institute: to give shape to permanent, collective expressions capable of legitimizing themselves from below and exercising real leadership. Without this political and ethical framework, rebellions will continue to be absorbed by the very mechanisms they claim to combat.
This problem is not unique to Peru: it runs throughout Latin America, where the breakdown of political parties has left people without vehicles to channel their social energy and without structures to sustain change.
José Jerí, the new president by parliamentary succession, represents the continuity of that regime. His arrival does not usher in a democratic transition: it consolidates the power of a Congress that acts as a closed caste, without legitimacy or ethical horizons. The problem is not who governs, but who continues to make decisions behind the scenes.
The Peruvian people, who marched, bled, and resisted, are once again left out in the cold: without justice, without representation, and without confidence. But they are also more lucid.
They have understood that it is not enough to change names; that real change requires breaking the mold, dismantling the Constitution inherited from Fujimorism, and re-founding the social pact from the bottom up, with real participation and living memory.
The soft coup does not close history: it lays it bare.
And in that nakedness—between the wound and the conscience—the word “people” can begin to be written with the ink of their own destiny.
---
This article was written by Globetrotter. Jaime Bravo is president of Corporación Encuentro Ciudadano. He is an economist with training in government techniques and studies in psychology. He advises public and private institutions in Chile and internationally on situational planning and organizational development.
Writer and essayist in the areas of critical thinking, economics, strategy, and analysis of different dimensions of national reality. Jorge Coulon is a musician, writer, and cultural manager. He is a founding member of the group Inti Illimani. He has published Al vuelo (1989); La sonrisa de Víctor Jara (2009); Flores de mall (2011); and recently En las cuerdas del tiempo.Una historia de Inti Illimani (2024)

Comments

TRENDING

Neville Cardus: The man who turned cricket writing into poetry

By Harsh Thakor*  Neville Cardus was one of the most remarkable literary figures of the twentieth century. A prolific English writer and critic, he achieved distinction in two vastly different fields: cricket and classical music. Entirely self-taught, Cardus rose from humble beginnings to become both the cricket correspondent and chief music critic of The Manchester Guardian . His achievements in these contrasting disciplines earned him widespread acclaim and established him as one of the foremost critics of his generation. In February 2025, the cricketing and literary world marked the fiftieth anniversary of his death, which occurred in February 1975.

Swami Vivekananda's views on caste and sexuality were 'painfully' regressive

By Bhaskar Sur* Swami Vivekananda now belongs more to the modern Hindu mythology than reality. It makes a daunting job to discover the real human being who knew unemployment, humiliation of losing a teaching job for 'incompetence', longed in vain for the bliss of a happy conjugal life only to suffer the consequent frustration.

The politics of dreaming: Savita Singh's feminist imagination

By Ravi Ranjan*  In contemporary Hindi poetry, few voices have explored the philosophical and creative possibilities of women's experience as powerfully as Savita Singh. Across collections such as "Svapna Samay" (Dream Time), Aapne Jaisa Jeevan, and "Prem Bhi Ek Yatana" Hai, she has developed a poetic world in which woman is not merely a subject of suffering or social commentary but a creator of knowledge, meaning, and alternative realities.