- Title: Chileans who voted out Pinochet in referendum turn focus to his constitution
- Date: 23rd October 2020
- Summary: SANTIAGO, CHILE (OCTOBER 21, 2020) (REUTERS) (SOUNDBITE) (Spanish) POLITICAL ANALYST, RENE JARA, SAYING: "Some analysts see Sunday's election as the birth of a new division within Chilean political society, because it will mark a before and after between the options of approve and reject. In that sense, it is going to be something that is going to shape Chilean politics probably for 20 or 30 years more."
- Embargoed: 6th November 2020 13:25
- Keywords: Chile President Sebastian Pinera constitution referendum social protests voting
- Location: SANTIAGO, CHILE
- City: SANTIAGO, CHILE
- Country: Chile
- Topics: South America / Central America,Government/Politics,Elections/Voting
- Reuters ID: LVA004D1CMGCN
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: Chileans will go to the polls on Sunday (October 25) 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.
Polls suggest the campaign to approve a new magna carta will win two thirds of the vote.
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.
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.
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.
(Production: Jorge Vega, Esteban Medel, Liamar Ramos) - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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