Miami Herald (Sunday)

Chile election pits hardline Catholic against leftist

- BY PHILIP SANDERS AND VALENTINA FUENTE Bloomberg News

Chilean presidenti­al candidate Jose Antonio

Kast is 55 years old, has nine children and is a member of the Catholic Schoenstat­t movement. His rival, Gabriel Boric, is 20 years younger, agnostic and single with no children, and once said monogamy wasn’t the only option.

You couldn’t get two more different people to face off in Chile’s runoff presidenti­al election set for Dec. 19. It’s shaping up to be as much a battle of generation­s, or cultures, as one of economic ideologies.

As a student leader in the late 1980s, Kast was a fervent admirer of late dictator Augusto Pinochet. He was also part of a generation that upheld bans on abortion under any circumstan­ce and made Chile one of a handful of countries in the world where divorce was illegal.

Boric first became known as a student leader a decade ago when the country was convulsed by protests demanding better education standards. More recently, he’s apologized for any sexist comments he made in the past and has joined feminists in demanding the overthrow of the patriarcha­l society. It’s not a deconstruc­tion of attitudes that Kast would contemplat­e.

The difference­s are immediatel­y clear in their political manifestos.

The second theme on Kast’s website is “defending the family,” with a photo of a smiling couple and their child. The second topic on Boric’s platform is “feminism,” with an image of a woman’s fist raised in defiance.

Kast’s program has alarmed women’s rights groups.

“Many of the measures on his original program represent a significan­t setback in terms of gender equality,” said Alejandra Sepulveda, the executive president of organizati­on Comunidad Mujer. “One doesn’t see in Kast’s trajectory a genuine conviction to advance women’s rights.”

Next week senators and deputies are expected to vote on a proposal to allow same-sex marriage, a bill that’s been stuck in congress since 2017. The measure has been supported by center-right President Sebastian Pinera, but criticized by more conservati­ve politician­s including Kast.

While cultural issues on their own may not swing the election, gender equality was tied for third place among the most relevant issues in a poll conducted by Cadem, trailing only social rights and crime.

In late 2019, street protests against inequality erupted across Chile. The movement was driven by anger over the neo-liberal economic model, and also against traditiona­l pillars of society including the church, police and big business.

For many, the protests were the violent culminatio­n of 20 years of change that has transforme­d Chile from a conservati­ve, authoritar­ian society into a more open, secular one. Boric can be seen to embody that cultural change. Kast represents the reaction against it.

“Boric responds to cultural patterns that have to do with the defense of environmen­tal rights, gender equality, and rights of indigenous peoples,” said Claudio Fuentes, a political analyst and professor at Universida­d Diego Portales. “Instead, Kast promotes more traditiona­l values, the family and the concept of nation.”

A strong participat­ion by young voters could bolster Boric in the runoff, according to Fuentes. Recent polls show Boric ahead of Kast by more than 10 points, though Kast and centerrigh­t candidates performed better than expected in the first-round vote on Nov. 21.

Turnout has been poor in Chile since voting was made optional in 2012. The first round saw just 47% of eligible voters cast a ballot.

Kast may still pivot to soften his view on some issues ahead of the runoff, including plans to rename the Women’s Ministry.

“It isn’t an obstacle for us to modify some parts of our program,” Kast said on Nov. 24.

 ?? CRISTOBAL OLIVARES Bloomberg ?? Gabriel Boric, presidenti­al candidate for the Social Convergenc­e party, speaks during a digital campaign event ahead of the Dec. 19 election in Santiago, Chile.
CRISTOBAL OLIVARES Bloomberg Gabriel Boric, presidenti­al candidate for the Social Convergenc­e party, speaks during a digital campaign event ahead of the Dec. 19 election in Santiago, Chile.
 ?? TAMARA MERINO Bloomberg ?? Jose Antonio Kast, Republican party presidenti­al candidate with his wife Maria Pia Adriasola during an election night rally in Santiago, Chile, in November.
TAMARA MERINO Bloomberg Jose Antonio Kast, Republican party presidenti­al candidate with his wife Maria Pia Adriasola during an election night rally in Santiago, Chile, in November.
 ?? MAHMOUD ILLEAN AP ?? An Israeli policeman examines the body of a Palestinia­n man shot near Damascus Gate to the Old City of Jerusalem, on Saturday, after an ultra-Orthodox Jewish man was stabbed nearby.
MAHMOUD ILLEAN AP An Israeli policeman examines the body of a Palestinia­n man shot near Damascus Gate to the Old City of Jerusalem, on Saturday, after an ultra-Orthodox Jewish man was stabbed nearby.

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