Skip to main content
Advertise Buy the paper Contact us Shop Subscribe Support us
Communist elected leader of the lower house in Chile
Karol Cariola becomes the first Communist Party member to be elected president of Chile’s chamber of deputies, a major defeat for the right, reports EL SIGLO

KAROL CARIOLA, 37, a midwife and former president of the Federation of Students of the University of Concepcion (a major industrial town and port in central Chile) and former general secretary of Chile’s YCL, won this Monday evening’s nail-biting vote by 76 to 75 in a historic moment for the Communist Party of Chile.
 
“Today we have shown the willingness to build, despite our diversity and differences, a common position in the leadership of the chamber of deputies,” the jubilant Cariola said.
 
“I call on the opposition to collaborate with the development of the country,” Cariola emphasised, “to abandon the calls to weaken the [Boric] government, to abandon the calls to bog down the debates about public policies that Chileans urgently require.

“We will represent the diversity of this parliament, and we’ll be open to listen, dialogue and work with all forces, and collaborate with the government of President Gabriel Boric.

“We are also willing to listen to and incorporate all ideas and proposals that contribute to the advancement of the country as a whole, the welfare of our homeland the welfare of its people from Arica to Punta Arenas and from the sea to the mountains.”
 
Cariola observed that: “Chile does not stand still and neither do we, we are moving forward and this office will be supportive of all the advances that are so necessary at this very moment in time.”
 
The result was a bitter blow for the right wing and its candidate the Christian Democrat Joanna Perez.
 
The negotiations, on the final selection of candidates, had been going on for weeks and went on through Sunday night and well into Monday. Twenty minutes before the vote, at 5pm, Luis Cuello, on behalf of the ruling coalition, finally confirmed that Cariola would be the coalition’s candidate to preside over the lower house, with Gaspar Rivas (People’s Party) and Eric Aedo (Christian Democracy) as first and second vice presidents.
 
The minister of the presidency, Alvaro Elizalde, said: “A good signal has been given to eradicate any policy of exclusion. As a government, we are going to continue working with the ruling coalition and dialogue with the opposition so that we can make progress on a legislative agenda that is important for the country.”
 
He added: “The government reiterates its desire for democratic dialogue with all actors in order to reach solutions that benefit the entire country, and we are certain that we will do a very good job with those elected today.”
 
El Siglo (the Century) is the newspaper of the Communist Party of Chile.

Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Features / 25 October 2022
25 October 2022
After the devastating poll defeat of the proposed new constitution, the Communist Party of Chile plenary has decided to implement a 'national plan of the masses' that will retake the political initiative from right-wing forces, reports EL SIGLO
Similar stories
Features / 24 October 2024
24 October 2024
On the fifth anniversary of the rebellion and the eve of local elections, HUGO GUZMAN looks at how the demands made by the people have not been properly addressed
Features / 24 May 2024
24 May 2024
The former minister of the interior and former president of the Socialist Party GERMAN CORREA speaks with Hugo Guzman about his fears for a rapidly deteriorating Chile plagued by institutional, political and social degradation
Features / 11 April 2024
11 April 2024
El Siglo’s Ursula Fuentes Rivera speaks to ERIC CAMPOS, the CUT (Chile’s TUC) general secretary, on the eve of the general strike
Features / 7 March 2024
7 March 2024
In recent weeks, Chile has seen a worrying increase of virulent media attacks on the integrity of the Communist Party, which prompted President Gabriel Boric to publicly defend it. The situation was addressed on Monday by an editorial in El Siglo