
The Americas Quarterly Podcast A Right Turn in Chile?
11 snips
Nov 13, 2025 Patricio Navia, political scientist and professor at NYU and Universidad Diego Portales, breaks down Chile’s election moment. He discusses how rising crime and rapid immigration are reshaping voter priorities. He explains why law-and-order politics help the right, profiles contenders across the spectrum, and outlines the economic and diplomatic tradeoffs Chile faces going forward.
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Dual Admiration: Moderates And Strongmen
- Chileans simultaneously admire technocratic moderation and strongman security approaches as complementary hopes and fears.
- This dual admiration explains support for both Mark Carney–style moderation and Nayib Bukele–style toughness.
Immigration Alters The Electorate
- Rapid immigration has increased foreign-born residents to nearly two million and now represents about 5% of eligible voters.
- Candidates must balance immigration critique with caution because many immigrants can vote.
Change Without Radicalism
- Chileans want change but reject radical reforms and repeatedly vote for alternation in power.
- Anti-elite sentiment benefits outsider candidates on both the right and left.
