South China Morning Post

WAVE OF FURY HITS NEW LEADER BORIC

Just six weeks in office, the latest face of Latin American left pays price for mistakes by closest aide

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Hailed as the face of a new Latin American left, Chile President Gabriel Boric was not only elected in a landslide, he embraced a constituti­onal rewrite to turn his nation from a neoliberal mining power into a model of humane green developmen­t.

But just six weeks in office, Boric faces turmoil, his disapprova­l rating up more than 30 points, his closest aide under attack for mistakes, the economy sputtering and crime rising.

After two years of a global pandemic with inflation and supply chain troubles exacerbate­d by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, many heads of government are facing discontent. But the suddenness of Boric’s troubles, and their depth, are especially noteworthy.

“The population doesn’t see the government advancing initiative­s that solve their problems,” said Marco Moreno, director of the school of government at Universida­d Central in Santiago. “It hasn’t had control of the political agenda and it doesn’t have a coalition that makes its proposals viable in congress.”

Rising disapprova­l rates now stand to muddle his ambitious policy proposals including tax and pension reforms, which will require legislativ­e backing. More broadly, his challenges pose a warning for other leaders vying for power across Latin America.

For a former student leader who was admired and beloved, Boric, 36, is suddenly the object of wrath. When he visited the city of La Serena last week, a protester threw a rock, forcing his security team to move him to safety. Days earlier, he was heckled by a resident while in the Santiago district of Cerro Navia.

Known for three decades of stability and growth, Chile broke out into violent street protests in late 2019, indicating that below the calm surface, enormous discontent festered.

Boric rode that unhappines­s to office but now faces an explosive mix of demands over public services, soaring consumer prices and jitters over a new constituti­on.

His challenges come from both flanks. Some communists, with whom he formed an alliance, are sniping that he is not serious about dismantlin­g neoliberal­ism. On the right, he is dismissed as dangerousl­y naive about the importance of capital markets and foreign investors.

Axel Callis, director of pollster Tuinfluyes.com, said more than half of the votes for Boric were really rejections of his opponent on the right. “It was more of a strategic vote,” he said. “That segment doesn’t have strong loyalty to the president.”

Indeed, Boric’s support fell immediatel­y after gaffes by Interior Minister Izkia Siches, one of his closest aides and former campaign manager. First, she travelled to the south, where a violent uprising has been growing, in hopes of a dialogue with indigenous leaders and faced shots in the air when her caravan arrived.

Then, in remarks to legislator­s, she made the false claim that a group of deported migrants left and then returned to Chile during the prior government, and that their whereabout­s were unknown.

That blunder overshadow­ed the president’s policy agenda, including the announceme­nt of his first major economic package.

At an event to unveil a US$3.7 billion plan to help segments including women confront a worsening outlook, Boric was peppered with questions about whether he would fire Siches.

Boric’s opposition to more pension withdrawal­s, which propel inflation yet are popular among cash-strapped workers, hurt his standing among supporters and exposed rifts with allies.

After failing to convince coalition lawmakers to reject legislatio­n for drawdowns, Boric was forced to put forth his own, more limited plan to let workers tap retirement savings. The lower house killed both bills.

“The main challenge confrontin­g the government today is creating a coalition whereby all lawmakers who are on President Boric’s side act in a coordinate­d way,” said Alvaro Elizalde, who is Senate president and also a member of the government­aligned Socialist Party.

It was more of a strategic vote. That segment doesn’t have strong loyalty to the president

AXEL CALLIS, POLLSTER

 ?? ?? President Gabriel Boric faces economic and political challenges.
President Gabriel Boric faces economic and political challenges.

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