Monday, November 14, 2005

A new iron lady for Chile






-Taylor Kirk

This weekend, Chileans are expected to elect their first female president, who happens to be a former Minister of Defense and a single mother. Michelle Bachelet is well ahead in most polls, though carrying less than 50% of the likely vote, making it likely that her victory will ensue from a runoff election. Though well-liked and popular in her homeland, few outside Chile are familiar with her history or her proposals for Latin America's most dynamic economy.

Bachelet's success stems from her ability to project her status as a common Chilean, her anti-Pinochet credentials, and her Socialist party affiliation, whose brand and reputation is in good condition after years of a booming economy under Ricardo Lagos. Her gender seems not to have stunted her popularity, though she puts to rest any accusations of being soft on defense with her success in reforming the military, an institution historically dominated by the male elite. As Minister of Defense she pushed through reforms to upgrade defense capabilities and include women in the military, making the percentage of female conscripts higher even than in the United States. A pediatrician by training, she also headed the Health Ministry until 2002, where she worked to reduce waiting times at public hospitals.

Her proposed economic policies are similar to those of her party colleague, Ricardo Lagos. As socialists, they are both committed to reducing the wide wealth gap and broadening access to education and telecommunications. Bachelet has proposed improvements to the country's pensions system, famously privatized by former secretary of labor and social security, Jose Pinera. Bachelet has said that she will maintain the current sales tax, crack down on tax evasion, and spend carefully the revenues produced by copper exports, which provide almost 15% of government revenues.

If she is in fact elected, she will be the first Chilean leader to rule under the newly reformed Constitution, signed by Lagos this September to reduce the entrenched control of the military over the country's politics. Thus she will have the power to fire the armed services commanders and summon the military-affiliated National Security Council, instead of the previous system that granted the NSC automatic advisory powers over the President. The reforms also changed the President's term from 6 years to 4, to coincide with Congressional elections, giving Bachelet less time to prove her worth as just the second female ever to be elected president in a South American nation.

2 comments:

  1. November 2005 through December 2006 there will be twelve countries holding presidential elections in Latin and South America.

    Honduras and Haiti - November 2005
    Bolivia and Chile - December 2005
    Costa Rica - February 2006
    Peru - April 2006
    Colombia - May 2006
    Mexico - July 2006
    Brazil and Ecuador - October 2006
    Nicaragua - November 2006
    Venezuela - December 2006

    The left will continue to dominate, now more moderate than in the 70s, but always somewhat opposed to the United States which has lost interest in the region.

    As far as Brazil and Mexico, I guess we will just have to wait and see.

    Peru is looking as if they might be running Flores Nano, in her declarations, often mentions the term 'popular liberalism,' which makes me think that her administration would be more conscious of the welfare of the people and will apply economic policies more modern than those of Alexander Toledo.

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  2. My, how times have changed! I just viewed a documentary piece on Chile in the Allende-Pinochet-CIA era: "Operation Condor."

    I recall fondly how Chilean friends, voluntarily exiled to escape the fate of Condor's "desaparicidos," have returned in recent years to build a new, vibrant society.

    Chile has served its purgatory; the fact that a woman is even running for presidency is a sign that the "old days" are over.

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