Florentino Perez re-elected as Real Madrid president is now official, and the margin leaves little room for doubt about where the club’s membership wanted to go next. Real Madrid’s Electoral Board confirmed that Perez’s candidacy won 21,741 votes, or 65%, while Enrique Riquelme received 11,814 votes, or 35%, after 100% of the in-person and mail-in ballots were counted.
That result keeps Perez in charge until 2030 and gives him a fresh mandate at one of the most important moments in the club’s modern cycle. For Real Madrid fans, this is not just a boardroom story. It is a decision that will shape the sporting project, the tone around the Bernabeu, and the power structure behind every major move this summer and beyond.
Florentino Perez re-elected as Real Madrid president: what happened
The biggest takeaway is the simplest one: Perez did not just survive a challenge, he beat it convincingly. Real Madrid’s official result made clear that the president won with a 30-point gap over Riquelme, turning what had become a genuine contest into a decisive victory once the full count was complete.
The official numbers tell the story
A 65% share is a strong endorsement in any election, but it matters even more at a club where presidential races are rare and where institutional continuity often carries enormous weight. Perez said after the result that his candidacy won at all polling stations and described it as “an extraordinary result,” adding that it was the second-best return of his electoral history at the club.
Riquelme still matters in this story, though, because his 35% is not a token figure. It shows there was real appetite among some members for an alternative voice, and that alone gave this election a sharper edge than many around the club expected when the process opened. Madridistas did not simply rubber-stamp the status quo; they voted, debated, and ultimately chose continuity by a clear margin. That reading is an inference from the final margin and the very existence of a two-candidate race.
Why this result matters beyond club politics
Perez’s re-election matters because the Real Madrid presidency is never just ceremonial. At this club, the president sits at the center of the biggest institutional decisions: the football project, the long-term business model, the Bernabeu vision, and the balancing act between tradition and modern power. Sunday’s result means those levers remain in the same hands.
That is why the win feels bigger than a simple headline about an executive staying in office. Perez used his post-election speech to stress two themes that have defined his public case for years: independence and member control. He said Real Madrid would remain owned by its members and framed the club as one “not afraid of challenges,” a message clearly designed to tell supporters that this victory protects the model as much as the man.
There was also a note of unfinished tension in the aftermath. Perez said nearly 1,000 mail-in votes had been annulled for procedural reasons and that his camp intended to appeal. That does not change the winner, but it does show that even after a convincing official result, the election will still leave behind talking points about process, participation, and how fiercely both sides viewed the stakes.
What this means for Real Madrid
For the club itself, the message is stability. Perez now has the authority of a new mandate, and that gives him political cover to move decisively in the next phase of Real Madrid’s planning. Even when supporters focus mainly on transfers, lineups, and trophies, this kind of result still matters because it defines who controls the direction of all of those conversations.
Perez also tied the result directly to Real Madrid’s next sporting chapter. In his remarks, he pointed to the Bernabeu, the club’s elite standards, and the return of Jose Mourinho, linking the election win to a broader message of ambition rather than simple institutional survival. Whether fans agree with every choice or not, the signal is obvious: Perez wants this victory to feel like a launching point, not a defensive hold.
That is why this story will keep spreading into other areas of the site and the wider Madrid conversation. The election result naturally opens the door to deeper debates about Mourinho’s immediate priorities, how the squad could be reshaped, which players may gain or lose status, and whether this renewed mandate changes the mood around the club’s summer decisions. It is one result, but it touches almost every major Real Madrid topic fans will follow next. This is an editorial inference drawn from the role of the presidency and Perez’s own post-election framing.
What happens next
The pressure on Perez does not disappear because he won comfortably. In some ways, it grows. A fresh term until 2030 means the expectations reset immediately, and at Real Madrid those expectations are always brutal: more titles, smarter decisions, bigger nights, and no loss of institutional control. The election is over, but the judgment on what comes next starts now.
Florentino Perez re-elected as Real Madrid president is the final result, but it is also the beginning of the club’s next test. The members have handed him another mandate. Now he has to turn that trust into football success, strategic clarity, and a summer that proves this vote was about more than continuity alone.
Sources Used:
- OKDIARIO (
https://okdiario.com/diariomadridista/real-madrid/florentino-gana-elecciones-del-real-madrid-642398) - Real Madrid (
https://www.realmadrid.com/en-US/news/club/latest-news/comunicado-oficial-de-la-junta-electoral-resultado-elecciones-07-06-2026) - Real Madrid (
https://www.realmadrid.com/en-US/news/club/latest-news/florentino-perez-07-06-2026)
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