70% of Chileans in Canada support draft constitution, as majority in Chile vote to reject it - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 29, 2024, 09:29 PM | Calgary | -16.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Hamilton

70% of Chileans in Canada support draft constitution, as majority in Chile vote to reject it

While voters in Chile made it clear Sunday they donot supporttheconstitution that was proposed to replace thedictatorship-era document the country currently has, Chileans in Canada overwhelmingly voted in support of the draft.

The 'reject' camp won the referendum Sunday, meaning Chile will keep its Pinochet-era constitution for now

Sebastian Ried, a Chilean living in Hamilton, voted in the referendum at a polling station in Toronto, one of six cities where Chileans could vote in Canada. He felt 'hope and fear' earlier in the day but was saddened by the results, he said Sunday evening. (Submitted by Sebastian Ried)

While voters in Chile made it clear Sunday they donot supporttheconstitution that was proposed to replace thedictatorship-era document the country currently has, Chileans in Canada overwhelmingly voted in support of the draft.

"I'm sad but the results were overwhelming," Sebastian Ried, a Chilean manwho lives in Hamilton and voted in the referendum from Canada, said Sunday evening.

With 99 per centof the votes counted, the rejection camp had 61.9 per centsupport compared to 38.1 per centfor approval. Unlike recent elections, voting was mandatory.

Meanwhile, results from Chileans abroad were exactly reversed 60.9 per cent voted to support the new draft, 39.1 per cent rejected.In Canada, the gap was even wider, with 70.4 per cent supporting, 29.6 per cent rejecting.

There were around 15 million Chilean citizensandresidents eligible to vote, including 97,000Chileans abroad.Six cities in Canada held polling stations Sunday: Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary, Ottawa, Winnipeg and Montreal. Atotal of 4,838 Chileanscast ballots in those cities by the end of the day.

"It scares me thatadvances forthe rights of women, Indigenouspeoples and the environmentalare not being recognized," saidRiedwho voted in support of the draft and had felt a mix of hope and fear earlier in the day.

If the proposal hadpassed, it would have replaced the constitution imposed under the military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet and dramatically changed the country.

DanielaCaballero, whocame to Canada with her husbandCristian Mansilla and theirdaughter in 2019, also voted in support of the draft, saying she was hoping it would help lessen inequality in Chile.

"First of all, I'd like to say I appreciate the transparency, and how quickly we are getting the results," she said after polls closed."I'm proud of the democracy that we have, far from Pinochet's dictatorship."

Still, she was sorry to see the results, she said. "Looks like this is not how we will change the constitution.... I hope tonight every Chilean (especially the politicians) takes a big breath and thinks about how we are going to do it."

Significant changes had been proposed

The vote cameless than a year after leftist Gabriel Boric, a former student activist, won the presidential election in Chileand nearly three years after protests broke out in the country calling for, among other reforms, a new constitution.

"I think [the draft] recognizes a series of rights and problems that our country has not accepted. And it seems to me that it is a very good first step to building a fairer and better country for all Chileans," Riedsaid earlier on Sunday.

According to Pascal Lupien, a political science professor at Brock University in St. Catharines, Ont., whose research focuses on Latin America and social movements,the new constitution would have been a complete overhaul.

"I mean, it's just completely different Chile would go from a very conservative, elitist, rigid constitution to one of the most progressive constitutions in the world," he said before the vote.

Some changes laid out in the draft included the abolition of the senate toreplace it with a chamber of regions which, as the name states, would represent the different regions of the country.

The draft also listededucation, housing and healthcare as rights, which would have been run by the state.

Nature would have also been accorded rights,Lupiensaid, something that could have caused tension with the country's powerful mining industry, which Canada also has stakes in.

According to the Canadian government,Chile is Canada's top investment destination in South and Central America12thworldwide with Canadian companies "present in mining, utilities, chemicals, transportation and storage services and financial services."

According to Lupien,Chile is the only country in Latin America that doesn't recognize Indigenous people in its constitution. The draft proposed more rights, including some land rights, for Indigenous people, he said.

That section in particular hadbeenthe target of misinformation in both Chilean media and social media,Lupien said.

"[This] has led a lot of people to believe that this will basically cause the state to disintegrate [and] that Indigenous people will be able to impose Indigenous law on non-Indigenous people."

That was not in fact the case, Lupiensaid.

Mixed reactions to the draft

Going into Sunday, Chileans both in Chile and in Canada were divided on the decision to change the constitution.

One Chilean man, not in Canada,said in a tweet translated from Spanish that the reason why he wasrejecting the new draft is that "Chile is getting farther from Toronto and closer to Caracas, Venezuela. Chile is being destroyed from within like cancer," he wrote on Friday.

Onewomanwriting from Canada, said she was voting to reject it as, in her view, "the new Constitution only divides," she saidon Twitter Sunday.

Daniela Caballero and Cristian Mansilla immigrated to Canada from Chile with their daughter in 2019. (Submitted by Daniela Caballero)

From Canada, where thousands of Chileans came as refugees during the Pinochet era, Caballerosaid the vote had "a special meaning."

"[My generation is]the sons and daughters of democracy. We didn't live in a dictatorship [like our parents did]," she said.

Chile returned to democracy in 1990 but Pinochet's constitution remained.

"For some of those adults that were young when [Pinochet] was there, they say, 'OK, this is the last step to take this guy out.'"

'Back to the drawing board'

Lupien says there willlikely be another constitutional convention after another draft is written. "Likely, they will be forced to remove some of the more progressive elements," he said.

"There's going to be, I think, a lot of turmoil, because there are a lot of people that have really been pushing for this.

"They will have to just go back to the drawing board... The decision to write a new constitution has been made, but that will probably take another year or so."

Ried says it's still the righttime for a changein the country, with itclosing in on the 50th anniversary of the 1973 Chilean coup d'tat.

"As a minimum moral duty to our country, we deserve to start the 50 years of this anniversary with a new constitution."

With files from Associated Press, Reuters