The Economist - UK (2021-11-20)

(Antfer) #1
The Economist November 20th 2021 49
The Americas

Chile

Pole positions


I


n october 2019 more  than  a  million
Chileans  took  to  the  streets  to  demand
greater equality and better public services.
At least 30 people died in protests that last­
ed for weeks. To restore calm, Chile’s lead­
ers  increased  social  spending  and  agreed
to  a  process  to  rewrite  the  constitution
adopted  under  Augusto  Pinochet,  a  dicta­
tor who ruled from 1973 to 1990. Members
of  a  constitutional  convention  elected  in
May  this  year,  many  of  them  leftists  and
political neophytes, have begun drafting a
charter that could transform the country. 
Until recently it looked likely that Chile
would  elect  a  new  president  who  shares
the  protesters’  goals.  For  months  Gabriel
Boric,  a  35­year  old  former  student  leader
allied  with  the  Communist  Party,  was  the
front­runner  in  a  presidential  election
whose  first  round  takes  place  on  Novem­
ber 21st. (Legislative and regional elections
are  also  scheduled  for  that  day.)  Now  it
seems  that  the  presidential  race  will  be  a
hard­fought  contest  between  him  and  a
candidate  of  the  far  right,  José  Antonio
Kast, who has surged in the polls. A cham­
pion  of  “liberty,  the  rule  of  law  and  the

family”, Mr Kast would preserve Pinochet’s
low­tax  economic  model  and  restore  his
social conservatism. “Boric represents the
demands that gave rise to the protests. But
Kast  represents  what  happened  two  years
after, which is that people want peace, or­
der and security,” says Roberto Izikson, the
head of Cadem, a polling company. 
The  summoning  of  the  constitutional
convention  did  not  end  the  upheaval,  as
Chileans had hoped. On October 18th prot­
esters  marked  the  second  anniversary  of
the  demonstrations  with  more  violence.
Two  people  died  and  hundreds  were  ar­
rested.  Last  month  the  government  also
declared a state of emergency in southern
Chile in response to arson attacks, mostly
against  logging  companies,  by  some  Ma­
puches,  an  indigenous  group  seeking

greater  autonomy  in  its  ancestral  lands.
This allows the government to send in the
army.  On  November  9th  it  extended  the
emergency after a video appeared on social
media that showed heavily armed, hooded
men  threatening  to  boot  the  army  out.  To
many,  a  rise  in  immigration  looks  hardly
less menacing (see next story). 
Having  demanded  a  new  constitution,
some Chileans have misgivings. They wor­
ry that it will enshrine obligations that the
state  cannot  afford,  fuelling  inflation,
which has recently risen sharply. The con­
stitution  may  declare  Chile  to  be  a  “pluri­
national”  state,  giving  indigenous  groups
more  influence.  Trust  in  the  convention
fell after the revelation that a far­left mem­
ber  had  lied  about  having  cancer,  which
was a central theme of his campaign. One
poll  shows  that  its  approval  rating  has
dropped  by  almost  15  percentage  points
since July (though it remains more popular
than other political institutions). 
Mr  Boric  would  put  the  presidential
palace  on  the  side  of  the  protesters  and
their  allies  in  the  constitutional  conven­
tion. He would scrap the model for public
services  introduced  by  the  Pinochet  re­
gime, which gives private providers a large
role.  He  would  forgive  all  student  debt,
abolish  private  pension  funds  and  make
public  transport  free  and  green.  Children
as  young  as  14  would  be  able  to  change
their gender on documents; schools would
be  equipped  with  condom  dispensers;  “at
least” 1% of jobs in the public sector would
be  reserved  for  trans  people.  Mr  Boric

S ANTIAGO
Candidates of the far left and far right are the leading contenders for the
country’s presidency

→Alsointhissection
50 Cuba’ssquelchedprotest
50 HardshipformigrantsinChile
51 Bello: The ambiguities of Peronism
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