Chileans who voted out Pinochet in referendum turn focus to his
constitution
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[October 23, 2020]
By Natalia A. Ramos Miranda and Aislinn Laing
SANTIAGO (Reuters) - Chileans will go to
the polls on Sunday to vote on whether they want to swap a constitution
written during the Pinochet dictatorship in favor of a new document
written by a specially elected citizens' body.
A new constitution was a key demand of demonstrators engaged in
unprecedented social protests that broke out in October last year over
inequality and elitism. A cross-party referendum deal emerged from the
protests in December.
Those opposed to a new constitution argue it represents a "leap into the
void" to change a document that has helped make Chile one of the
region's most stable free market economies.
Those in favor say the current text privileges private interests, and
segments access to health, education and pensions by income.
Alejandro Werner, IMF Western Hemisphere director, said on Thursday the
process could herald "a new era in which the main elements that
generated the Chilean success story... are maintained in terms of
economic growth, but complemented by a social inclusion agenda."
A downside risk, he added, was "a multiplicity of social policies
without macroeconomic support."
Polls suggest the campaign to approve a new magna carta will win two
thirds of the vote.
Cristobal Bellolio, a political commentator who favors a new text, said
it would ensure the "nation's fingerprints," rather than those of a
small elite, were on its rulebook.
The concern, he added, was that some might expect a new draft to turn
Chile into a benevolent welfare state overnight.
"I get the feeling there are many people thinking of the constitution as
a government program," he said.
Chileans famously voted to end the 17-year dictatorship of Augusto
Pinochet in a 1988 plebiscite.
The current constitution was drafted by Pinochet's close adviser Jaime
Guzman in 1980 and has only been tweaked by successive governments to
reduce military and executive power.
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An activist holds a sign reading "I approve, constitutional
convention" ahead of the upcoming referendum on a new Chilean
constitution in Santiago, Chile, October 22, 2020. REUTERS/Ivan
Alvarado/File Photo
Among those to reform it was liberal former President Ricardo Lagos.
He told Reuters last week that Guzman made his draft deliberately
watertight, meaning aspects like a flawed pension system and ban on
collective bargaining were impossible to change. nL1N2H70RU
Voters will approve or reject the drafting of a new constitution.
Uniquely in Chilean history, they will also be asked if a fresh text
- to be voted on in a second referendum - should be drafted by a
constitutional convention of specially elected citizens or a mixed
convention of lawmakers and citizens.
A recent spike in violent protests and nervousness about large
public gatherings amid the coronavirus could dampen turnout. All
Chileans are automatically registered to vote, but participation is
voluntary.
Stringent security and sanitary measures have been rolled out in
2,715 polling stations across the nation of 18 million.
Surfaces have been sprayed with cleaning products containing nano-copper
particles, a use of Chile's key export enthusiastically championed
by the government after research suggested it was particularly
inhospitable to the coronavirus.
Soldiers will oversee voting while police will guard outside in case
of further unrest.
Mariano Machado, a Latin America analyst with risk analytics company
Verisk Maplecroft, said a result calling for a new constitution
drafted by a constitutional convention would help "contain" but not
eradicate Chile's underlying social unrest.
(Reporting by Natalia Ramos and Aislinn Laing; Editing by Tom Brown
and Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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