Kast’s
Victory in Chile Is Another Win for Global Right-Wing Movement
José
Antonio Kast, who was elected president on Sunday, is the latest conservative
to rise to power promising strict law and order measures.
Emma
Bubola
By Emma
Bubola
Reporting
from Santiago, Chile
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/15/world/americas/chile-kast-right-wing-movement.html
Dec. 15,
2025, 5:02 a.m. ET
José
Antonio Kast had seen it coming. “Our ideas already won — they won in the
United States, they won in Italy and they won in Argentina,” he said on Chilean
radio one day after President Trump’s inauguration in January. “We are going to
win, too.”
This
Sunday, he finally did. Mr. Kast was elected as Chile’s president on his third
try, scoring a resounding victory against his leftist opponent and pushing the
country decidedly to the right as Chileans’ sought iron-fisted solutions to
increased violence and illegal immigration.
Mr. Kast,
a stern father of nine with deep ideological roots in conservative Catholicism
and economic neoliberalism, belongs to a global right-wing movement that has
risen to power around the world by prioritizing strict law and order and
sealing borders. He obtained 58 percent of the vote on Sunday.
“Chile
cannot get used to fear, and Chile cannot get used to fire,” he said in his
victory speech on Sunday night. “Chile will be free from crime again.”
Mr. Kast
has embraced an expression, “Chileans first,” that mirrors Mr. Trump’s America
First slogan, and promised to build a physical barrier at Chile’s northern
border, which a significant number of Venezuelan migrants have crossed in
recent years.
He spoke
at a summit of the Conservative Political Action Conference in Hungary this
year, praising the country’s prime minister, Viktor Orbán, and railing against
multiculturalism and political correctness. And this month, Mr. Kast met with
the security minister of El Salvador, whose president, Nayib Bukele, has drawn
praise for his harsh crackdown on gangs, even as he has been accused of human
rights violations.
Some of
the things he heard in the meeting, Mr. Kast said, “could eventually also be
applied in Chile.”
Yet of
leaders across the world, Mr. Kast “has the greatest affinity with Giorgia
Meloni, by far,” said Rodolfo Carter, a Chilean senator and spokesman for Mr.
Kast’s campaign.
Mr.
Kast’s 7,000-mile tie with Italy’s prime minister, whom he met in September and
called a few weeks ago, suggests a clear strategy that analysts say was
instrumental to Mr. Kast drawing broader support and mounting a victorious
campaign.
Like Ms.
Meloni, Mr. Kast was once a fringe candidate considered too extreme. Like Ms.
Meloni, whose party was born from the ashes of Italy’s bloody experiment with
fascism, Mr. Kast has a fraught relationship with his country’s brutal history
of dictatorship. And like Ms. Meloni, he has recently sought to downplay his
most hard-line positions to appeal to mainstream voters.
Unlike
his previous runs for office, Mr. Kast — who declined to be interviewed for
this story — avoided mentioning some of his more contentious positions, like
opposing abortion or the day-after pill, instead leaning on a more widely
popular platform of law and order and clamping down on illegal migration.
“Kast
understood very early that these two issues were driving people crazy,” said
Claudio Fuentes, a Chilean political scientist, “and he was able to focus on
them.”
A spike
in violent crime in Chile in recent years linked to the penetration of
international criminal networks propelled security to the forefront of the
voters’ concerns.
Mr. Kast
visited Chile’s most crime-ridden areas and promised strict measures, including
by announcing a countdown for migrants to self-deport or be deported.
As the
Kast government prepares to take on organized crime, said Mr. Carter, the
campaign spokesman, “there will be casualties.’’
Mr. Kast
has also promised to slash the federal budget, though he has not said
specifically what would be cut.
While Mr.
Kast’s priorities are similar to Mr. Trump’s, Mr. Carter flatly rejected any
comparisons. “We are not falling into this trap,” he said. “We are not the
caricature of the right.”
Mr. Kast
called for unity and respect in his victory speech on Sunday, urging Chileans
to get together to resolve what he called a national state of emergency, adding
that he will be the president of “all Chileans.”
Yet
critics are skeptical that Mr. Kast’s political strategy to soften his image is
anything more than a temporary facade.
“We all
know who he is,” said Sergio Aguiló, a socialist politician and longtime former
lawmaker who served with Mr. Kast in Chile’s parliament.
Mr. Kast,
a career politician, was born in Santiago to German immigrants. His father,
Michael Kast, fought in the German Army during World War II.
After a
Chilean reporter posted a document showing that his father was a member of the
Nazi party, Mr. Kast rejected the claim, saying that he was just a conscripted
soldier in the Nazi army and that both he and his father abhorred Nazism. His
brother, Miguel Kast, was a minister during Augusto Pinochet’s military
dictatorship, which killed and disappeared thousands of people.
Mr. Kast
has been active in politics since he was a law student at Chile’s Pontifical
Catholic university in Santiago. He was a follower of Jaime Guzmán, a law
scholar who was one of the main ideological architects of the Pinochet
dictatorship.
In the
late 1980s, Mr. Kast, while at the Catholic university, campaigned in support
of continuing Chile’s military dictatorship, a proposal that voters rejected in
a plebiscite.
Over the
years, he has acknowledged the human rights violations, but has continued to
express a measure of support for the dictatorship. The military government “did
a lot of good things for human rights,’’ Mr. Kast said in 2017, citing
improvements to Chile’s economy under Mr. Pinochet.
Some of
his supporters seem to agree. Recent opinion polls show that in recent years,
the number of Chileans unequivocally condemning the dictatorship has fallen,
with a growing number of people thinking that the dictatorship did both good
and bad.
“We need
an iron fist like when Pinochet was here,” said Erika Moscoso, who voted for
Mr. Kast and lives in the northern Andean village of Cariquima. “Here we lived
calmly.’’
Mr. Kast
avoided mentioning the military’s dictatorial rule during the campaign and
stayed away from some of the core religious themes that have defined his
political career.
After he
was elected a lawmaker in 2001, Mr. Kast stood out for his work on educational
and family issues. He founded the “parliamentary front for life” — a group of
lawmakers focused on opposing abortion and promoting traditional values — and
also opposed the sale and distribution of the day-after pill.
“Those
were the themes that motivated him the most,” said Pablo Longueira, a prominent
conservative politician, who called him a “person of solid principles.”
Mr.
Aguiló, the veteran lawmaker, said he used to joke with Mr. Kast about his
intransigent positions that stood out even within Mr. Kast’s party, which was
the furthest to the right in the country at the time.
“I didn’t
imagine there could be someone even more to the right than your colleagues,”
Mr. Aguiló remembered telling Mr. Kast.
Mr. Kast
broke away from his party in 2016, and later started a new one, the Republican
Party, based around the principles of the “defense of human life since
conception,” family values and the market economy.
He
publicly talked about how he and his wife did not use contraceptives and in
2022 he became the president of the Political Network for Values, an
international anti-abortion organization that, according to its website,
promotes strictly heterosexual marriage and “the right of parents to decide the
education of their children,” and opposes euthanasia.
In an
election debate this year, Mr. Kast said he had not changed his mind on his
core values, but decided to stress what he thought were more important matters
for Chileans — safety, jobs, and economic growth.
Mr. Kast
had already began talking about the issue of security in 2021, at the onset of
Chile’s increase in killings and as a significant jump in illegal immigration
had taken hold. But at the time, the country was emerging from enormous
demonstrations calling for equality and social justice and it elected a
left-wing president, Gabriel Boric, whose campaign platform spoke to those
concerns.
Now, a
recent Ipsos poll shows that 60 percent of Chileans want the government to
prioritize reducing crime.
“Kast
already had credibility on those themes,” said Patricio Dussaillant, a media
strategist who advised Mr. Kast during his 2021 campaign, referring to crime
and immigration. “The difference is that these issues were not on the political
agenda. And now they are.”
John
Bartlett and Pascale Bonnefoy contributed reporting from Santiago.
Emma
Bubola is a Times reporter covering Argentina. She is based in Buenos Aires.


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