Will Chile bring back former President Bachelet?
As Chileans go to the polls Sunday, they are likely to select former head of state Michelle Bachelet, who many believe can answer the chorus of Chilean grievances. Are expectations too high?
Chilean presidential candidate Michelle Bachelet of Nueva Mayoria (New Majority) delivers a speech during her closing campaign rally in Santiago on Thursday. Chileans go to the polls in the first round of presidential elections on November 17.
Maglio Perez/Reuters
Santiago, Chile
Santiago鈥檚 Plaza de Armas is a museum of discontent. In the course of a single recent day, striking government workers, protesting teachers, and animal rights activists all held rallies, each gathering watched over by nervous police.
鈥淎ll the studies and observations show that the Chilean people have a deep malaise because they feel unheard,鈥 says Marcela R铆os, a political scientist in the governance program of the United Nations Development Program in Santiago. And this is in good economic times. 鈥淲e always wonder,鈥 Ms. R铆os says, 鈥渨hat would be the public reaction if things went badly?鈥
As Chileans go to the polls to vote for a president Sunday, they are likely to bring back a former head of state, Michelle Bachelet, who many believe can answer the chorus of Chilean grievances and make the system work.
Former President Bachelet left office in 2010 with a sky-high 84 percent approval rating, and if she wins the election as pollsters overwhelmingly predict, that love could be put to the test.
Ms. Bachelet had plenty of rough moments in her 2006 to 2010 term. And skeptics, including her leading opponent, conservative former labor minister Evelyn Matthei, are asking if Bachelet can manage to deliver free higher education, higher taxes needed to deliver that service, and more regulation without risking the country鈥檚 economic miracle.聽
But polls show an army of supporters ready to give her another chance.
鈥淢ichelle wants to make the changes that this country needs,鈥 says Adriana Cabeza, a retiree sporting a Bachelet lapel pin on the Santiago Metro. The seven other candidates 鈥渓ack preparation鈥 for the presidency and 鈥渨ould be chaos,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut the country needs change. It鈥檚 a pressure cooker.鈥
Protest marches have been a constant drag on the government of President Sebastian Pi帽era, who was the first conservative to be elected to the top job since 1958.
Environmentalists oppose dams, indigenous groups and soccer fans chant against police crackdowns, workers seek higher pay, gays blast homophobic violence, and 鈥 most of all 鈥 students demand an educational system with more equal opportunity.
With this election, many Chileans hope to move beyond protests to systemic change. In speeches, Bachelet has promised dozens of reforms to how Chile runs its schools, taxes businesses, and treats indigenous people. She has largely campaigned to the left, allowing the Communist Party into her center-left bloc for the first time. She has called for changes to the constitution, which dates to the right-wing dictatorship of General Augusto Pinochet and creates a permanently deadlocked legislature, slowing change. She has offered to soften Chile鈥檚 strict anti-abortion laws and to allow gay marriage.鈥 聽 聽
Whether she can fulfill those promises is another story. For example, her official platform offers only to change the constitution within existing structures, rather than hold the constitutional convention demanded by a broad movement in the country. The platform remains vague about gay marriage and abortion, in order to satisfy the relatively conservative 海角大神 Democrats in her coalition. And business groups are preparing to oppose her plan to slowly increase business taxes.鈥 聽 聽 聽 聽 聽
Up to now, Bachelet has largely been immune from the sense of disappointment that burdens many ex-presidents. Despite her mishandling of the 2010 earthquake and tsunami 鈥 calling off a tsunami warning and leaving coastal residents in harm鈥檚 way 鈥 she has remained well in the lead in polls throughout this campaign.
鈥淪he has a very personal connection with the people, a connection that isn鈥檛 polluted by politics,鈥 says Patricio Navia, a Chilean professor of political science at New York University, who is in Santiago for the election.
Bachelet鈥檚 support is largely a result of how she handled the 2008 crash in copper prices, which threatened the country鈥檚 economy. Chile鈥檚 fiscal rules allowed her to tap a rainy day fund and hand out a series of stimulus checks, boosting her approval ratings from the 40s to the 80s.
She has a 鈥渧ery firm base鈥 among the millions of Chileans who benefited from her economic stimulus during the 2008 crisis, Ms. Navia says.
Eight opponents have sought to break Bachelet鈥檚 support since the campaign began. From the right, Ms. Matthei says the former president makes unrealistic promises that could hurt Chile鈥檚 economic growth. From the left, she has faced heat for approving controversial mining, agriculture, and energy projects during her first term.鈥
Bachelet鈥檚 support predates the campaign. A year ago, before she declared herself a candidate, 54 percent of respondents in a poll by the Santiago-based Centro de Estudios P煤blicos, or CEP, said they had already decided to vote for Bachelet. When the CEP released its latest report at the end of October, they found that among those who were certain to vote, Bachelet鈥檚 support was the same 54 percent.鈥 聽 聽 聽 聽 聽
Polls from the international polling firm IPSOS show a tighter race, with Bachelet leading Matthei 32 percent to 20 percent. If no one wins a majority in the election Sunday, Chile will hold a second round runoff in December.
The results won鈥檛 be known until Sunday night, and Matthei, who is polling second, could mount a more vigorous challenge in a second-round election. She has been touring the country, visiting homes, housing projects, and job training centers to offer new proposals.
鈥淢ay Chileans fulfill their moral and ethical duty鈥 by going to vote, Matthei said at her birthday party Monday in a working-class town near Santiago. Analysts say a higher turnout for her and the seven independent candidates could keep Bachelet from winning outright Sunday, potentially giving Matthei another month to try to catch up.