Skip to main content
The Morning Star 2026 Conference
Reflecting on the final push to liberate Chile
LAUTARO CARMONA, parliamentary candidate for the mid-northern district of Atacama explains to Hugo Guzman the importance of this weekend’s elections
A voter in Chile today

WITH campaigning days up to 12 hours long and travelling hundreds of kilometres in the heat Lautaro Carmona, the left electoral coalition Apruebo Dignidad’s candidate for Atacama, has been concentrating all her energy on getting people to vote and “consolidate support for  left-wing candidates” — including presidential hopeful Gabriel Boric — for parliament and regional councils.

We need to focus on the fact that “a quality of life different from the current one is entirely possible, within the framework of a new government that addresses issues of the right to free health and education, the right to a new pension system, employment rights, the right to housing, job stability and a decent and fair salary, the rights of indigenous peoples, the right to a healthy coexistence without crime or drug trafficking, where culture, sport and diversity are promoted, where women’s rights are prioritised,” he told El Siglo.

Carmona said that “a certain degree of scepticism” has appeared in recent weeks, adding: “We must concentrate all our energies, all our arguments, all our persuasion skills, on explaining why — for the future of our families and our people -—it is important to go and vote. A large voter turnout is needed in order to advance the positions of transformation and change.”

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
IRON FIST: Mass exodus of Latin American migrants cross from Chile at the Santa Rosa border point in Tacna, Peru on Monday in a panic reaction at Jose Antonio Kast’s threats of expulsion
Politics / 3 December 2025
3 December 2025

Far-right forces are rising across Latin America and the Caribbean, armed with a common agenda of anti-communism, the culture war, and neoliberal economics, writes VIJAY PRASHAD

People head to cast their ballots in the former Mapocho railway station during a primary held by the Unidos por Chile coalition, in Santiago, Chile, June 29, 2025
Features / 11 July 2025
11 July 2025

Communist Party presidential candidate JEANNETTE JARA challenges the Chilean left to stop talking only among comrades and reach out to angry voters abandoned by politics in the race against the far right this November

Candidate Jeannette Jara, of the Communist party, embraces supporters before voting in primary elections held by the Unidos por Chile coalition to choose the ruling party's candidate for the upcoming presidential election, in Santiago, Chile, June 29, 2025
Features / 4 July 2025
4 July 2025

For the first time in years, the dominant voice within Chile’s official left comes not from neoliberal centrists but from the world of labour, writes LEONEL POBLETE CODUTTI