Chile Rejects Constitution That Would Have Banned 'Job Insecurity' and Disbanded the Senate
Whether voters will approve of whatever draft the government writes next remains to be seen.

On Sunday, Chilean voters rejected a proposed constitution that an elected assembly had been drafting since 2021. The 54,000-word document would have replaced the free market–friendly 1980 constitution, banned "job insecurity," abolished the Senate, and massively expanded welfare programs.
Voting in the referendum was mandatory. Surveys conducted by Pulso Ciudadano in the months prior to the referendum projected the new constitution would fail, but no poll accurately predicted what turned out to be a 61.9 percent to 38.1 percent landslide rejection of the draft constitution.
President Gabriel Boric, who supported the document, says Sunday's rejection shows the efficiency of Chile's democratic system, and the government will try again to write a constitution that works for all Chileans.
"We have the opportunity to build the foundations of a new Chile," Boric said in a speech following the vote, "collecting the best in our history, embarking us on a journey that strengthens us as a country and as a community."
Enacted in 1980 during the military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet, Chile's current constitution promoted the privatization of industry and social services. Through the amendment process, it helped lower inflation and poverty rates, cut red tape, and increase gross domestic product over the following 40 years. The country's free market economy has made it a model in the region.
But in 2011, student protests erupted over "unacceptable inequality," with protesters demanding economic and social change to address the gaps between the rich and poor. Leaders of the movement said the Pinochet-era constitution was largely to blame. In October 2020, a year after violent protests shook the country, 78 percent of Chilean voters opted to replace Chile's constitution.
The proposed replacement, drafted by a constitutional assembly elected in May 2021, would have permitted property and asset seizures by legislative decree, disbanded the Senate, ended school choice, mandated gender parity in all public institutions, and granted social rights that would expand the role of the state in health care, education, and housing.
It is true, as Boric stated in his speech, that the "vast majority" of Chileans want change. But it appears that voters were wary about the length of the document, its vagueness and breadth, and its numerous social proposals that seemed to go too far left.
"The constitution that was written now leans too far to one side and does not have the vision of all Chileans," one voter told the Associated Press.
Boric has made it clear that the process to change the country's constitution is not over. He said leaders must "work with more determination, more dialogue, more respect" to write another draft "that unites us as a country."
To that end, the 36-year-old has called on political leaders to come together to discuss how to move forward and to "agree as soon as possible on the deadlines and borders of a new constitutional process." On Monday, Boric met with Senate President Álvaro Elizalde, Chamber of Deputies President Raúl Soto, and leaders of different municipalities.
Elizalde and Soto are set to host meetings with Chile's political parties and social organizations, with Elizalde saying he hopes "to move quickly" to push the constitutional process forward.
The 1980 constitution has its flaws, for which it has been altered over the last four decades. "Yet," states a report by Niall Ferguson, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford Univesity, and Daniel Lansberg-Rodríguez, a constitutional research fellow at the Comparative Constitutions Project, "the idea that a constitution born in political sin can never become legitimate flies in the face of a great deal of history."
The practice of discarding constitutions and rewriting foundational texts in Latin America helps to explain the region's constant political turmoil.
An analysis by the University of Chicago Law School shows that the average lifespan of a constitution in Latin America is 12.4 years.
Ferguson and Lansberg-Rodríguez write that frequently replacing constitutions "can have precisely the opposite effect to what is ostensibly intended, weakening democratic institutions by denying them the benefits of reputations built up over time. By changing their constitutions too much too often, countries risk normalizing institutional vacuums, exacerbating instabilities and institutionalizing the kind of 'adhocracy' that constitutions are supposed to protect against."
Chileans have had three constitutions since 1833, and the 1980 constitution, while longstanding, has been heavily amended. Cuba has had four in the last 120 years.* Brazil has had seven since its independence in 1822. Venezuela has had 26. The Dominican Republic has had a whopping 38.
"A constitution provides legal stability and predictability—like a computer operating system," wrote Daniel Raisbeck, a policy analyst on Latin America at the Cato Institute, and I for Reason last month. "Tampering with any foundational code creates security holes that are easily exploited by political opportunists looking to amplify their own power and overturn the established order."
Whether voters will approve of whatever draft the government writes next remains to be seen. What is clear is that rehashing foundational documents, as Raisbeck warned, "could bring years of chaos, economic stagnation, and legal uncertainty."
*CORRECTION: Cuba has had four constitutions in the last 120 years.
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This article, and pretty much everything I've read about this vote, doesn't explain what happens next. Is the 1980 constitution in effect indefinitely, or is there a specific timeline for another new constitution to vote on? Are they stuck in a perpetual cycle of drafting and voting on new constitutions until one of them passes? Or is there a limit to this nonsense?
It would be very interesting to know more about that October 2020 referendum.
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Yes, the existing Constitution remains in effect indefinitely. It's nothing like the 1980 Constitution because it has been amended many times. It's better to amend a constitution than to write a new one.
I tip my hat that Reason covered this news.
IOW the fat, retarded, millennial "student leader" president will obfuscate the wording and keep submitting the same constitution until he wins. Who knows maybe the subway fares go up again and the Chileans vote this one in.
The constitution was something out of a freshman year victims studies course that invented 100 new rights such as shelter, food, pay, pursuit of lifetime dreams, at least 50% elected women, etc. 388 articles specifying other laws. It was insane.
Largest voter turnout ever and the no vote was 62% with celebratory protests the night after the announcement.
The government was elected during the height of covid shut downs near lowest voter turnouts.
He can't win because it requires a supermajority to be enacted. The existing Constitution will never be replaced.
"...would have ... banned "job insecurity,"..."
Fucking lying lefty shit-piles; 'freedom from want', right?
It literally included the right to pursue ones dreams.
Fuck me, we're all on the same page, albeit for probably a nanosecond.
That's okay shrike. You can go back to deflecting for Biden next thread.
Bugger off, serf (might as well change it up). I seldom comment on Biden.
No. You deflect for him shrike. Like your post earlier saying Obama cultists didn't exist but trump ones do lol.
Bugger off, serf. Obama is not Biden. And I never said that Obama cultists don't exist, only that there are far fewer of them. I've never come across any Obama supporter whose political and economic opinions are driven by what Obama most recently said nor who will defend him against any and all criticism. But you Trumpsuckers can't help yourselves.
Fuck off and die, asshole.
SQUAWK!!!!!!
On the bright side, at least it didn't include the right to pursue happiness.
The 54,000-word document...
Google said 4,440 words in our sacred text. Not sure if it includes amendments. Doesn't matter since we're talking about an order of magnitude.
We should reduce it to three words.
fuck off slaver
Well, the people of Chile had more sense than the idiots who promoted this POS.
Stick to a constitution with stuff the government can't do to you and a few genuinely fundamental rights, make it clear that the direction of flow is citizens to government, not vice versa, and if then it is felt (by whom?) that job insecurity, for example, is a rights violation, let a political party put that on their platform and try to get elected - they may indeed succeed.
I'm not saying that a country has to adopt the US constitution wholesale, though it wouldn't take much modification to make it appropriate for say Chile, and after all the US constitution itself needs some amending. But to have 50,000 words of some feelgood document is bullshit.
Bring back free helicopter rides for marxists and a lot of "problems" will be solved.
What does outlawing "job insecurity" mean?
The proposed replacement, drafted by a constitutional assembly elected in May 2021, would have permitted property and asset seizures by legislative decree, disbanded the Senate, ended school choice, mandated gender parity in all public institutions, and granted social rights that would expand the role of the state in health care, education, and housing.
So the far left wish list. It's universal that political professionals are much further left than the politicians they represent.
Normally I'd say let them have it, good and hard. But Venezuela already provides the real world example of unrestricted leftist governance.
populations they represent
If you haven't already, you should google up some communist constitutions. They're pretty humorous.
Number one hit under communist regimes!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CJK6yfx9AK4
Naked Eyes - Promises, Promises
What kind of popular support does ending school choice have? Is it stated in some other form such that you'd have to infer that its unstated effect would be to end school choice?
The commies never give up.
Buy more helicopters.
Enough with the helicopters, already!
1. Invent new gender
2. Claim to be said gender
3. Point out there is no one of that gender in the job you want
4. Boom! Promotion
“But Socialism would have worked - this time.”
Always
Idiot.
I think the giveaway that it was a shitty deal was the abolishing of the senate. I think that might have been the entire point and everything else was cheese.
Serious question: why do the same people vote for candidates who profess certain values and policies and then vote against those same values and policies when on the ballot in the form of initiatives and referenda. It happened now in Chile, and not long ago in Colorado, when people voted for a bunch of tax and spend Democrats and then voted against a slate of tax increase proposals.
Lazy dumbasses. They think the other team is evil because they were told so, but they don't actually hold the values of thier team.
Because they're stated vaguely or broadly in candidates' campaigns but specifically on the ballot.
If I remember right, the previous government of Chile was tossed out because they were corrupt and incompetent. The Leftists then swooped in, and mistook the other party being fired as broad approval for their idiotic agenda.
Then when they put their agenda on the ballot it goes down to flaming defeat.
The radical leftists screwed the pooch on this one. They wrote out their wish list in detail and then asked the voters for approval. The voters said fuck no.
Which our voters would do in a similar situation, but I doubt they'll be given the chance.
Stealth operations, boring from within, whatever phrase you wish...that's the radical left path to power.
Standard far-left error - think that if the people understood what they wanted, they'd get voted in, when the opposite is almost always true.
But to think that the Democratic party overall bears any relation to the Chilean left-wing is absurd.
Yup. In Latin American terms, Biden is the sensible right wing.
Rhetorical excess on my part. The Internet made me do it.
It does that!
Yeah, totally!
(The fact that crime-wise and inflation-wise we're increasingly resembling Latin America is just a coincidence!)
No doubt some leftist academic or politician here will point out that Chile is the whitest country in South America, so blame racism for the new constitution not passing.