Chile's Election Race: Communist Jara Faces Rising Rejection As Kast Gains
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Chile will elect a new president on November 16, with a possible runoff on December 14, according to the Electoral Service (Servel).
The left's candidate, Jeannette Jara, a long-time member of the Communist Party of Chile, won her coalition's June primary with about 60 percent.
That early advantage has since eroded, as polls show her struggling in direct matchups against conservative rival José Antonio Kast . Criteria's August survey placed both Jara and Kast at 29 percent for the first round.
In a runoff, Kast would defeat her 47 to 35. Other polls in August confirm the same trend: Jara remains competitive in the first round, but her support falls sharply when the field narrows to two candidates.
Her main obstacle is a rising rejection rate. More Chileans each month say they would not vote for her under any circumstance. Analysts point directly to her Communist Party affiliation as a key factor.
While her style is approachable, the party's ties to past support for authoritarian regimes in Latin America and its rigid positions on economic control have historically triggered high mistrust.
Kast's negatives, meanwhile, have fallen slightly, helping him in the runoff scenarios. Jara , 51, a lawyer and former labor minister, promotes stronger state involvement in key sectors and a gradual“vital income” of 750,000 pesos.
Yet her August 18 program marked a step back from earlier Communist Party positions. She removed calls for full nationalization of copper and lithium, instead promising to expand production with a larger state role alongside private investors.
She also moved away from eliminating private pension fund managers, despite her party's past demand for their removal. These shifts, along with campaign missteps and disputes inside her coalition, have raised doubts about her consistency and her independence from party leadership.
Kast, by contrast, offers a clearer message on crime, migration, and deregulation, issues that resonate strongly with voters concerned about security and the economy. The outcome matters well beyond Chile.
As the world's top copper exporter and second largest lithium supplier, the country sits at the center of global supply chains for energy and technology. The next president will set the rules on how state and private capital share control of these resources.
Jara still holds strong first-round support, but her Communist Party label and growing negatives suggest that the decisive runoff could tilt toward Kast. That underlying tension makes Chile's vote one of the most consequential in Latin America this year.
The left's candidate, Jeannette Jara, a long-time member of the Communist Party of Chile, won her coalition's June primary with about 60 percent.
That early advantage has since eroded, as polls show her struggling in direct matchups against conservative rival José Antonio Kast . Criteria's August survey placed both Jara and Kast at 29 percent for the first round.
In a runoff, Kast would defeat her 47 to 35. Other polls in August confirm the same trend: Jara remains competitive in the first round, but her support falls sharply when the field narrows to two candidates.
Her main obstacle is a rising rejection rate. More Chileans each month say they would not vote for her under any circumstance. Analysts point directly to her Communist Party affiliation as a key factor.
While her style is approachable, the party's ties to past support for authoritarian regimes in Latin America and its rigid positions on economic control have historically triggered high mistrust.
Kast's negatives, meanwhile, have fallen slightly, helping him in the runoff scenarios. Jara , 51, a lawyer and former labor minister, promotes stronger state involvement in key sectors and a gradual“vital income” of 750,000 pesos.
Yet her August 18 program marked a step back from earlier Communist Party positions. She removed calls for full nationalization of copper and lithium, instead promising to expand production with a larger state role alongside private investors.
She also moved away from eliminating private pension fund managers, despite her party's past demand for their removal. These shifts, along with campaign missteps and disputes inside her coalition, have raised doubts about her consistency and her independence from party leadership.
Kast, by contrast, offers a clearer message on crime, migration, and deregulation, issues that resonate strongly with voters concerned about security and the economy. The outcome matters well beyond Chile.
As the world's top copper exporter and second largest lithium supplier, the country sits at the center of global supply chains for energy and technology. The next president will set the rules on how state and private capital share control of these resources.
Jara still holds strong first-round support, but her Communist Party label and growing negatives suggest that the decisive runoff could tilt toward Kast. That underlying tension makes Chile's vote one of the most consequential in Latin America this year.

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