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Jeannette Jara Wins Chile's Left-Wing Presidential Primary Ahead of 2025 Election

Jeannette Jara Wins Chile's Left-Wing Presidential Primary Ahead of 2025 Election. Source: Vocería de Gobierno, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Chile’s former labor minister, Jeannette Jara, secured a decisive victory in the country’s presidential primary on Sunday, emerging as the left-wing coalition’s candidate for the upcoming November 16 election. Representing Chile’s Communist Party, Jara captured 60.31% of the vote, outperforming Carolina Toha of the Democratic Socialism party, who received 27.91%, with 98.27% of votes counted.

Jara, known for championing a government initiative to reduce the workweek to 40 hours, pledged to build a united front to confront the surging right-wing bloc. In a post-election speech, she criticized conservative parties for skipping the primaries, calling instead for political and social unity to counter their growing influence.

Only the governing leftist coalition, backed by President Gabriel Boric, participated in the primaries. Right-wing candidates, including Evelyn Matthei and Jose Antonio Kast, are choosing to compete directly in the general election without a primary process. Both currently lead national polls, reflecting public dissatisfaction with Boric’s administration.

President Boric, barred by law from consecutive re-election, has seen his approval ratings decline amid unmet reform promises, rising crime, and immigration concerns. His administration’s flagship initiative—a new constitution—was stalled, contributing to the right-wing’s resurgence.

Matthei, a seasoned conservative, is focusing her campaign on "order, progress and hope," while Kast, who lost to Boric in 2021, is running on a law-and-order platform.

If no candidate secures a majority in November, a runoff election is scheduled for December 14. Jara’s candidacy marks a pivotal moment for Chile’s left, which seeks to regain momentum amid a shifting political landscape. The November election will test whether progressive ideals can withstand growing conservative sentiment in Chilean politics.

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