The Guardian Australia

Jubilation and hope as convention puts final stamp on Chile’s new draft constituti­on

- John Bartlett in Santiago

The process of drafting Chile’s new constituti­on has come to an abrupt, jubilant end as the final votes were held quickly by the 154-member, genderequa­l constituti­onal convention.

Huddling between the colonnades at the former congress building in Santiago, which has played host to Chile’s constituti­onal process, the delegates hugged and cheered as the draft was finalised.

“It was fitting that we finished up like this,” said Tiare Aguilera, 40, a delegate representi­ng Chile’s Polynesian territory Rapa Nui, or Easter Island, on the steps outside the building.

“This is how it has been all along – tight deadlines and a lot of uncertaint­y as we tried to address our country’s turbulent political process.”

The draft constituti­on will be formally presented at a 4 July ceremony, before all Chileans aged 18 or older must vote to either approve of reject it in a nationwide plebiscite on 4 September.

The campaigns run by both camps are expected to be hard-fought and divisive.

But after a year of tense negotiatio­ns and occasional­ly bitter infighting, the 388-article draft shifts Chile’s developmen­t decisively away from the neoliberal consensus of the current constituti­on – drafted without democratic input by a team of dictator General Augusto Pinochet’s confidants.

The new draft, by contrast, broadly makes the state responsibl­e for the provision of services, enshrines a host of social and cultural rights, and guarantees gender parity across government and public enterprise­s.

It also lays out a path for autonomy for Chile’s Indigenous peoples, who were guaranteed representa­tion in the constituti­onal convention.

“[The draft] does two things in particular,” said Tomás Laibe, a 31-yearold representi­ng Aysén, a swathe of Chilean Patagonia in the far south of the country.

“It rethinks the state’s relationsh­ip with social rights, and it enshrines representa­tive democracy to open the door to other forms of participat­ion.”

Chile’s journey towards replacing its constituti­on began long ago, but gathered irresistib­le momentum in late 2019 when millions of people poured on to the streets to decry their dissatisfa­ction with their lives and the political forces governing them.

The vast social movement precipitat­ed a peace accord, of which current president Gabriel Boric was a signatory, paving the way for a plebiscite to be held a year later on 25 October 2020.

Almost 80% of Chileans voted to draft a new constituti­on, and the largely leftwing convention was inaugurate­d in July last year.

This May, the convention drew up a draft with nearly 500 articles which have now been streamline­d and condensed.

But with tensions running high, the ceremony was briefly suspended by a vicious street battle where protestors hurled hunks of concrete while police fired back with water cannons and teargas.

Since then, a vociferous campaign to undermine the process has simmered in the background, and although polling currently suggests that a majority of Chileans plan to reject the draft, many delegates remain proud of their work.

“The process has been full of hope from the beginning,” said Félix Galleguill­os, 36, who sat in the seat reserved for the Lickanatay Indigenous community from the Atacama desert.

“There’s never been a constituti­onal process like this before and there never will be one again. It’s unique.”

 ?? Photograph: Cristian Rudolffi/AFP/Getty Images ?? Chile’s new draft constituti­on. Chileans must vote to approve or reject it in a plebiscite on 4September. Polling suggests a majority plan to reject the draft.
Photograph: Cristian Rudolffi/AFP/Getty Images Chile’s new draft constituti­on. Chileans must vote to approve or reject it in a plebiscite on 4September. Polling suggests a majority plan to reject the draft.

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