MercoPress, en Español

Montevideo, November 4th 2024 - 18:37 UTC

 

 

Chilean conservatives clear win in Punta Arenas, first time in almost thirty years

Wednesday, October 26th 2016 - 11:10 UTC
Full article 1 comment
Claudio Radonich managed a comfortable 47% of votes cast, ahead of the New Majority candidate Ramón Lobos, 20.3% and 17.4% for Emilio Boccazzi Claudio Radonich managed a comfortable 47% of votes cast, ahead of the New Majority candidate Ramón Lobos, 20.3% and 17.4% for Emilio Boccazzi
It was a black Sunday for president Michelle Bachelet and her coalition is now apparently in the process of a major split among Socialists and Christian Democrats . It was a black Sunday for president Michelle Bachelet and her coalition is now apparently in the process of a major split among Socialists and Christian Democrats .

The Chilean conservative alliance “Chile, let's go” which achieved a sweeping victory in last Sunday's municipal elections, causing a serious disarray to the ruling coalition New Majority with only a year before the 2017 presidential election, also managed to win the Punta Arenas mayoralty for the first time since the end of the Pinochet era.

 Last weekend turned into a black Sunday for president Michelle Bachelet and the coalition that supports her is now apparently in the process of a major split among the two main forces, the Socialist and the Christian Democrat parties.

Bachelet and her political ministers are Socialists but the Christian Democrats are furious with the Sunday outcome since they disagreed with the campaign and now have walked away from the joint strategy political council and question whether ex president Ricardo Lagos, a Socialist, should be the coalition's hopeful candidate next year.

The ruling New Majority lost several emblematic counties in metropolitan Santiago and was removed in seven of the regional capitals, including Punta Arenas, in Magallanes.

In effect in the extreme south of Chile, since the end of the military dictatorship in 1990, when the last mayor appointed by the Pinochet regime came to an end, the Chilean center left coalition has prevailed in local politics, be it under the Concertacion or New Majority coalition, while the conservatives were left on the sidelines. Only once in these almost three decades did the conservatives have a limited influence by helping an independent become Punta Arenas mayor.

But now it´s different: Claudio Radonich managed a comfortable 47% of votes cast, well ahead of the New Majority candidate Ramón Lobos, 20.3% and 17.4% for Emilio Boccazzi the current mayor.

Voters by supporting Chile Let's go Radonich have punished the current mayor who only four years ago became the undisputed winner with 56% equivalent to 16.000 votes and last Sunday only obtained 4.800 ballots.

How come such a punishment? Well maybe Radonich gave an idea of what happened, “I was supported because the community are demanding an orderly, honest and transparent administration that looks after each and every peso which belongs to each of us”.

Chile Let's go most probable presidential candidate next year will be Sebastian Piñera, who back in 2009 when the ruling coalition Concertacion split, he was able to slip in and become president (2010/2014). If last Sunday's municipal elections are a reflection of Chilean voters' feelings, we shouldn't be surprised if he again returns to La Moneda.

Categories: Politics, Chile.

Top Comments

Disclaimer & comment rules
  • Marti Llazo

    Chanchelet's government and her coalition have been the very portrait of socialist ineptitude, weakness, political correctness, and corruption as the country's fortunes circle the drains. Her approval ratings of down around 15% have been the lowest of any president since Chile's return to democracy in 1990. Chile has pretended for far too long that it is free of corruption and Chanchelet provided the opportunity for dispelling that myth. Not that Piñera did much better since people over in Chile remember his weak performance in failing to effectively deal with two damaging regional rebellions. But Chile's peso inflation is nowhere near that of Argentina and right now Punta Arenas is full of Argentines buying up things that cost a great deal more here in Río Gallegos.

    Oct 26th, 2016 - 12:34 pm +1
Read all comments

Commenting for this story is now closed.
If you have a Facebook account, become a fan and comment on our Facebook Page!