Chile: the new Constitution massively rejected by referendum by nearly 62% of voters – franceinfo

The Chileans said “no” on Sunday to the text which was to replace the one inherited from the Pinochet dictatorship. But President Gabriel Boric immediately announced his desire to relaunch “a new constitutional process”. Article written by Published on 05/09/2022 06:10 Updated on 05/09/2022 06:35 Reading time: 1 min. It’s no. The Chileans massively rejected, on Sunday, September 4, the proposal for a new constitution which aimed to replace that inherited from the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet (1973-1990). The verdict of this referendum with compulsory vote is without ambiguity and exceeds all the predictions of the polling institutes. Some 61.9% of voters, or more than 7.8 million people, slipped the ballot “I reject”, against 4.8 million (38.1%) in favor of the mention “I approve”, according to the final results. However, this choice only suspends the process of a new Constitution started after the violent popular uprising of 2019 demanding more social justice, and made the one drafted under the military regime guilty of all the ills of the country. But President Gabriel Boric immediately announced his desire to relaunch “a new constitutional process”. “I pledge to do everything in my power to build a new constitutional process,” solemnly declared after the results the 36-year-old left-wing president elected last December. From the presidential palace of La Moneda, he launched “an appeal to all political forces to put Chile before any legitimate divergence, and to agree as soon as possible on the deadlines and contours” of this new process “in which, of course, Parliament will have to be the main protagonist”. Celebrating the “defeat for the refounders of Chile”, Javier Macaya, president of the ultra-conservative UDI party, said at a press conference that he also wanted to “continue the constitutional process”, as the opposition had promised during the campaign to block the proposed text. Share: Share on Twitter Share on Facebook Share by email Share link