Chile's presidential race headed to tense runoff between communist and hard-right candidates

SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) — The communist candidate of Chile’s center-left government, Jeannette Jara, and a hard-right veteran politician, José Antonio Kast, will vie for the country’s presidency in a runoff vote next month after neither gained a winning margin in a polarized election on Sunday, initial results showed.
With 63% of the vote counted and results still trickling in, Chilean President Gabriel Boric recognized Jara and Kast as the front-runners headed to the second round of elections, scheduled for Dec. 14.
“I trust that dialogue, respect and love for Chile will prevail over any differences,” Boric said after a weekslong vitriolic campaign.
Shortly after he spoke, cheers erupted from the campaign headquarters of Jara and Kast on opposite ends of the capital of Santiago. “Kast, our next president!” his fans shouted, banging drums in the middle of the street.
Jara claimed more than 26.6% of valid ballots — far short of the 50% threshold to claim victory in the first round even with half of the ballots counted.
Kast was close behind, securing 24.3% of the vote, underscoring the power of his tough-on-crime platform in response to widespread discontent with rising insecurity and illegal immigration.
That could clear the way for a swing to the right in Chile, the world’s biggest copper producer and one of the region’s most prosperous and stable countries.
It was the first presidential election in Chile since voting has been mandatory and the registration of voters automatic, with over 15.7 million voters obliged to vote out of a national population of over 18 million, after years of abysmal voter turnout.

