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Fears over migration crime push Chile's presidential race to right

Santiago, Nov 14 (AP) Fans sported MAGA-style caps. AC/DC blasted from the speakers. Red, white and blue flags flapped in the wind. Crowds whooped and cheered as the man of the hour lamented the surge of migrants across the border.
     “This country isn't falling apart,” he bellowed. “It is being shot to pieces, by bullets.”
     You'd be forgiven for assuming this was a rally for US President Donald Trump. After all, the US president's name adorned plenty of campaign merch.
     But this eruption of visceral rage at immigrants and incumbents took place in Santiago, Chile, at the final campaign event for Johannes Kaiser, a radical libertarian candidate gaining traction before Sunday's presidential election in Chile, where rising fears of uncontrolled migration have pushed everyone in this race — even the governing coalition's Communist candidate, Jeannette Jara — to the right.
     Kaiser is “the only one with a firm hand, the only one who can pull us out of the United Nations, close the borders to all the Venezuelan criminals and throw them in prison in El Salvador,” said Claudia Belmonte, 50, peering out from beneath the brim of a red baseball cap emblazoned with Kaiser's promise to “Make Chile Great Again.”
     Such demands for a “mano dura," a “firm hand,” against crime and disorder have reshaped Chilean politics as transnational gangs like Tren de Aragua surged across porous borders from crisis-stricken Venezuela and elsewhere in recent years, importing kidnappings, contract killings and other violent crimes previously unseen in one of Latin America's safest nations.
     “People in Chile never had problems with foreigners. But you hear about a gang burying someone alive in your neighbourhood and it changes you,” said Carlos Jadue, 49, a lemon vendor in central Santiago. “I'm not racist. I see new people coming in. And I see new crimes.”
     The anti-immigrant backlash has transformed a nation that just four years ago elected the bright young hope of the Latin American left, President Gabriel Boric, a millennial former protest leader who handily defeated the ultraconservative lawyer Jose Antonio Kast in 2021 with vows to “bury neoliberalism" in response to demands of the nation's 2019 social upheaval.
     This time around, experts say Chile's nativist fears over illegal immigration give Kast a better shot, even if he's unlikely to clinch the 50% of votes needed to win outright in Sunday's first round. Polls show Kast facing off against Jara in a runoff on Dec 14.
     A victory for Kast would bear out a regional trend that has seen recent right-wing electoral wins in Argentina, Bolivia and Ecuador.
     “Every country is different, but there are regional structural factors pushing politics rightward in Latin America,” said Michael Albertus, a professor of political science at the University of Chicago. “There's rising crime and a post-pandemic anti-incumbent mood. Venezuelan migration has hit many countries at once.”
     In Santiago, there are few vestiges left of the 2019 mass protests against endemic social inequities — known here as “el estallido” or “the explosion" — in which as many as a million Chileans marched to vent a generation's worth of economic and political grievances.
     One is the stone plinth in the city's Plaza Italia, the central square where protesters battled nightly with police, torching buildings and braving bird shot. The bronze statue of 19th-century Chilean war hero Gen. Manuel Baquedano was defaced, then taken down for what authorities promised would be a quick restoration.
     Four years later, the stone plinth, scarred by anti-government graffiti, remains empty and freighted with symbolism. For protesters, it's a reminder of all that's unaddressed. Neoliberalism is alive and well. Chile retains the 1980 constitution adopted by military dictator Gen. Augusto Pinochet after Boric twice failed to change it.
     For critics, it's a reminder of the lawlessness that struck Chile, a stable prosperous nation that long distinguished itself from its more volatile neighbours. Many Chileans trace their feelings of insecurity back to those days of civil strife, when everything they knew about their country burst. (AP) SCY
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(This story has not been edited by THE WEEK and is auto-generated from PTI)