Posted on 05/17/2021 7:07:28 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Here's a terrible story out of Chile that bodes ill for its status as Latin America's wealthiest country and biggest success story.
According to Reuters:
Chile's center-right ruling coalition suffered a shock loss on Sunday night after failing to secure a critical one-third of seats in the body that will draft the country's new constitution.
With 90% of the votes counted, candidates backed by President Sebastian Pinera's centre-right Chile Vamos coalition had won only a fifth while independents picked up the most votes. New proposals will require two-thirds approval and without a third of the delegates, the government will struggle to block radical changes to the constitution unless it can forge new alliances.
The result and defeats for Chile Vamos candidates in mayoral, governatorial and municipal elections held at the same time bode ill for the ruling coalition ahead of general and presidential elections in November.
The numbers lineup is even worse than Reuters reported:
CNN's local channel in Chile projected independents would win 45 seats, Chile Vamos would gain 39, the centre-left 25, the far-left 28 and a small coalition would take one seat. Seventeen seats have been reserved for members of Chile's indigenous communities who are not mentioned in the present charter.
That's the rabid and supposedly not-so-rabid left taking 53 seats out of 155 total. What does that mean? I am not a big watcher of Chilean politics, based on the paucity of news here, but here is a first draft round of what I so far know:
Far-left Chileans don't even try to disguise who they are as they do over here; they enjoy advertising themselves as full-blown Castroite communists, all truth in advertising.
That leaves the regular left, and I suspect that all of their claims of being sane leftists is pure window dressing.
(Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...
A convention to change the Constitution sounds like Mark Levin to me but the Left may have gotten the upper hand in this Chilean vote.
Good article...I lived in Chile for over 5-years in the early 2000’s...was a good country...growing middle class, many good-paying jobs in the mining industry, lots of good tourist destinations.
Friends there now tell me living in country now is very different and becoming increasingly dangerous.
The key is and will be the military...will the senior officers buy into this self-imposed disaster?
I don’t think so.
They never should have patched the bullet holes in the outside walls of La Moneda...I always thought they were an impressive reminder.
Chile still has a military.
The wealthy always do get out with heir money.
I am still on the Chile U.S. Embassy’s news distribution list...amazing the increase in warnings about upcoming “disturbances”.
This all starts and is encouraged in the universities...especially Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile in Santiago.
If people think our US universities are far left...they ain’t seen nuttin...nada.
I lived for one year, prior to moving to La Serena, in Lo Barnechea, two houses from the back yard of Pinochet’s Santiago residence.
Safest location in all of South America!!
This really stinks. I always wanted to visit Valparaiso and the Chilean wine country, was hoping to plan vaca in the next couple of years. Guess I’ll find something else to do.
You can still visit Valparaiso as soon as you can. The full effects of socialism won’t take effect for a few years.
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Anyone else thinking what I'm thinking...
“You would think the Chileans had learned a lesson from it.”
Learned a lesson, appears not. Immediately brought to mind Ronald Reagan’s 1964 speech to the RNC. Clearly a lesson here for US.
“Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn’t pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same.” No weatherman, but Chile may be in for another period of night and fog.
“This will get interesting. Peru’s presidential elections are in less than a month.”
This is Keiko Fujimori’s third bid for president. She and supporters may have focused so much on their agenda that they’ve sorely ignored nurturing their bench with future candidates. Same failure to nurture the bench applies at all levels with professional pols in the US, especially Congress. Easy to sort out that newcomer Pedro Castillo is all but an out-of-the-closet Sendero. On a white horse and wearing a straw hat he embodies inspiration by Augusto Sandino.
“It’s all very sad what’s happening in what used to be a very pleasant, civilized and prosperous country.”
Thank You, you very well describe Chile and the situation.
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