Chileans reject conservative constitution to replace dictatorship-era text

Chile holds second constitution vote
A citizen casts a ballot during a referendum on a new Chilean constitution in Santiago, Chile, December 17, 2023. REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado
Source: X01744

Chileans reject conservative constitution to replace dictatorship-era text

By Alexander Villegas and Natalia A. Ramos Miranda

Chileans on Sunday rejected a new conservative constitution to replace its current text that dates back to the Augusto Pinochet dictatorship.

With 99.65% of ballot boxes tallied, a total of 55.76% Chileans rejected the new text while 44.24% voted in favor of it.

This is the second draft constitution in as many years that voters have rejected to replace its current text, a process born after large-scale, passionate and sometimes violent protests against inequality gripped the nation in 2019.

"The country got polarized, divided," President Gabriel Boric said during a televised address, adding that the result shows the process "didn't channel the hopes of having a new constitution written by everyone.

Boric reiterated his government wouldn't pursue a third rewrite and would move forward with pension and tax reform through the legislature.

"What the citizenry is demanding is a better capacity for dialogue, of consensus, but most of all action," Boric said.

Many Chileans have voiced mistrust and disenchantment with the process after years of polarization and political infighting.

Nina Vidal, 65, a secretary in the coastal city of Valparaiso said on Sunday that she was inspired by the first referendum but lost confidence in the second referendum.

"I sincerely thought things were going to change" the first time, she said after casting her ballot. "But unfortunately, nothing changes."

The first assembly elected to draft a new text was dominated by leftwing forces, and the draft focused on social, indigenous, environmental and gender rights. But that text was overwhelmingly rejected by voters last September.

The electorate swung right for the second draft and voters elected an assembly dominated by conservative parties.

That text was considered more conservative and market-friendly than the 1980 constitution it could replace. It placed private property rights and strict rules around immigration and abortion at its center.

"Finally, after four years of intense debate and constitutional conversation, we've ended up at the same point," said political analyst Kenneth Bunker, adding that the end of the vote should bring more political stability and confidence for investors.

Bunker says the question is what the government will do next.

"It's easier to change the constitution today and the question is how hard the government will push," Bunker said.

"I don't think the conversation is going to stop," he added, noting that he expects the issue to become key in the next presidential elections.

Some voters lamented the country's political polarization, which they said made it impossible for them to agree on a replacement constitution.

"Our differences are so irreconcilable that we cannot find a middle ground from which to move forward, and that is very sad indeed," said architect Claudio Fernandez, 41, in capital Santiago.

This article was produced by Reuters news agency. It has not been edited by Global South World.

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