Crime, immigration dominate as Chile votes for president

A woman casts her vote during the general election, at Lo Barnechea neighbourhood in Santiago, Nov. 16, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 17 November 2025
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Crime, immigration dominate as Chile votes for president

  • Chileans are also choosing members of the Chamber of Deputies and Senate
  • A sharp increase in violent crime has sown terror in one of Latin America’s safest nations

SANTIAGO: Chileans stood in long lines on Sunday to vote in general elections dominated by far-right calls for an iron fist on crime and mass migrant deportations.
Pre-election polls showed the main left-wing candidate, Jeannette Jara, a 51-year-old communist running on behalf of a broad coalition, winning the first round of voting for president.
But far-right leader Jose Antonio Kast is tipped to prevail in December’s run-off with Donald Trump-style plans to expel all illegal migrants.
Chileans are also choosing members of the Chamber of Deputies and Senate in the first general elections with compulsory voting since 2012.
Results are expected within two hours of polls closing at 4:00 p.m. (1900 GMT).
A sharp increase in murders, kidnappings and extortion over the past decade has sown terror in what is still one of Latin America’s safest nations.

- Shot for a gold chain -

“Just a few steps from my house, a young boy was recently killed because he was wearing a gold chain; he was shot. And three years ago, on my street, a young girl was almost kidnapped,” Rosario Isidora Herrera Munoz, who voted in Santiago with her six-month-old baby, told AFP.
“I hope that some day we’ll go back to the way we were before,” said Mario Faundez, an 87-year-old retired salesman.
“If we have to kill (criminals), so be it,” he added.
Jara on Sunday accused her rivals of “exacerbating fear” and spreading “hate,” and said their proposals did not amount to a full plan for governing.
The vote is seen as a litmus test for South America’s left, which has been sent packing in Argentina and Bolivia, and faces a stiff challenge in Colombian and Brazilian elections next year.
Jara served as labor minister under outgoing center-left president Gabriel Boric, who cannot run for a second consecutive term.
Ultra-right candidate Johannes Kaiser, who was closing in on Jara and Kast in the final days of campaigning, told AFP the election was about ending Latin America’s “disconnection...from the United States and the free world.”

- Walls, fences, trenches -

Despite a declining murder rate, Chileans remain transfixed by the growing violence of criminals, which they blame on the arrival of gangs from Venezuela and elsewhere.
Kast has vowed to build walls, fences and trenches along Chile’s border with Bolivia to keep out newcomers from poorer countries to the north, such as Venezuela.
Maite Sanchez, a 34-year-old Cuban living legally in Chile, expressed dismay on Sunday over the demonization of migrants “who did things properly, arrived with the right paperwork...and are contributing to the country.
Former YouTube polemicist Kaiser, a fan of Argentina’s Javier Milei, is the most radical of the candidates.
The 49-year-old libertarian MP energized youth voters with rock-themed rallies and blunt language about crime, immigration and the left.
Conservative ex-minister Evelyn Matthei, the 72-year-old establishment choice, struggled to make her mark on the campaign.

- Uphill battle -

Jara faces an uphill battle to overcome strong anti-communist and anti-incumbent sentiment.
Boric defeated Kast in 2021 on a promise to establish a welfare state after mass demonstrations in 2019 over inequality.
But his presidency was fatally weakened after voters massively rejected a progressive new constitution that he had backed.
Jara campaigned as a moderate with a track record of social reforms — she lowered the working week from 45 hours to 40 and raised the minimum wage — and vowing to ensure “every Chilean family can easily make it to the end of the month.”
Patricia Orellana, a 56-year-old Jara voter, said she feared a rollback in women’s rights if Kast or Kaiser, both of whom oppose abortion, won.
Kast, if elected, would be the first far-right leader since the 1973-1990 military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet.
The son of a German soldier in Hitler’s Nazi army, Kast has defended Pinochet, who overthrew a democratically elected socialist president in 1973 and oversaw a regime that killed thousands of dissidents.


Supporters of Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado march in cities worldwide

Updated 07 December 2025
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Supporters of Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado march in cities worldwide

  • Machado went into hiding and has not been seen in public since January

CARACAS: Supporters of Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado demonstrated Saturday in several cities worldwide to commemorate her Nobel Peace Prize win ahead of the prestigious award ceremony next week.
Dozens of people marched through Madrid, Utrecht, Buenos Aires, Lima and other cities in support of Machado, whose organization wants to use the attention gained by the award to highlight Venezuela’s democratic aspirations. The organization expected demonstrations in more than 80 cities around the world on Saturday.
The crowd in Lima carried portraits of Machado and demanded a “Free Venezuela.” With the country’s yellow, blue and red flag draped over their backs or emblazoned on their caps, demonstrators clutched posters that read, “The Nobel Prize is from Venezuela.”
Venezuelan Verónica Durán, who has lived in Lima for eight years, said Machado’s Nobel Peace Prize is celebrated because “it represents all Venezuelans, the fallen and the political prisoners in their fight to recover democracy.”
The gatherings come at a critical point in the country’s protracted crisis as the administration of US President Donald Trump builds up a massive military deployment in the Caribbean, threatening repeatedly to strike Venezuelan soil. Venezuela’s President Nicolás Maduro is among those who see the operation as an effort to end his hold on power, and the opposition has only added to this perception by reigniting its promise to soon govern the country.
“We are living through times where our composure, our conviction, and our organization are being tested,” Machado said in a video message shared Tuesday on social media. “Times when our country needs even more dedication because now all these years of struggle, the dignity of the Venezuelan people, have been recognized with the Nobel Peace Prize.”
Machado won the award Oct. 10 for her struggle to achieve a democratic transition in the South American nation, winning recognition as a woman “who keeps the flame of democracy burning amid a growing darkness.”
Machado, 58, won the opposition’s primary election and intended to run against Maduro in last year’s presidential election, but the government barred her from running for office. Retired diplomat Edmundo González, who had never run for office before, took her place.
The lead-up to the July 28, 2024, election saw widespread repression, including disqualifications, arrests and human rights violations. It all increased after the country’s National Electoral Council, which is stacked with Maduro loyalists, declared him the winner despite credible evidence to the contrary.
González sought asylum in Spain last year after a Venezuelan court issued a warrant for his arrest.
Meanwhile, Machado went into hiding and has not been seen in public since Jan. 9, when she was briefly detained after joining supporters in what ended up being an underwhelming protest in Caracas, Venezuela’s capital. The following day, Maduro was sworn in for a third six-year term.