Q&A with Datum CEO Urpi Torrado on Polling Peru's Razor-Close Elections
Q&A with Datum CEO Urpi Torrado on Polling Peru's Razor-Close Elections
“This is the most complicated election we’ve worked on,” says the head of the major pollster, who discusses voter volatility ahead of the April 12 vote.
In the week leading up to Peru’s April 12 elections, pollsters are legally barred from releasing voter intention data. But that also happens to be when around a third of the country’s 27.3 million voters are likely to make their decision.
“We have 14 percent of people saying that they decide the same day as the election,” said Urpi Torrado, CEO of polling firm Datum, “Even the candidate with the highest voting intention doesn't have 14 percent. So 14 percent deciding the day of the elections can change everything.”
In this interview, Torrado covers the challenges of polling across Peru’s diverse geography and population, late surges in candidate popularity, and why there might be a high percentage of invalid ballots.
Follow the major events on the campaign trail as Peru seeks stability among a crowded field of candidates.
"And we see that today, [polling data] is still changing, and it will continue changing until Sunday."
A historic number of candidates will compete in the April 12 first-round vote to lead the Andean country jaded by a decade of high presidential turnover.
"For us, this is the most complicated election that we have worked on."
Learn about the youth vote, changes to Congress, and top voter concerns as the Andean country readies to cast ballots on April 12.