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1993 Chilean general election

1993 Chilean general election

11 December 1993
Presidential election
← 1989
Turnout91.23% (Decrease 3.49pp)
 
Candidate Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle Arturo Alessandri Besa
Party PDC Independent
Alliance Concertación UPC
Popular vote 4,044,898 1,703,408
Percentage 57.98% 24.42%

 
Candidate José Piñera Manfred Max-Neef
Party Independent ECO
Alliance Ecologist Movement
Popular vote 430,950 387,102
Percentage 6.18% 5.55%

Results by commune

President before election

Patricio Aylwin
PDC

Elected President

Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle
PDC

Chamber of Deputies
← 1989
1997 →

All 120 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
61 seats needed for a majority
Turnout91.34% (Decrease 3.39pp)
Party Vote % Seats +/–
Chamber of Deputies
Concertación

55.40 70 0
UPC

36.68 50 +2
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Senate
← 1989
1997 →

18 of 46 seats in the Senate
Turnout90.29% (Decrease 4.44pp)
Party Vote % Seats +/–
Concertación

55.48 21 −1
UPC

37.32 17 +1
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.

General elections were held in Chile on 11 December 1993 to elect the President, members of the Chamber of Deputies and elected members of the Senate.[1] Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle of the Concertación alliance was elected president, and the alliance also won a majority of seats in the Chamber of Deputies and maintained its majority in the Senate. As of 2024, this is the most recent presidential election that did not result in a runoff.

Presidential candidates

Concertación de Partidos por la Democracia

The Concertación, which had governed with Patricio Aylwin since 1990, needed to choose a successor who would run as their presidential candidate in the 1993 elections. To determine their candidate, the parties decided to hold primary elections, marking a historic milestone as it was the first time in Chile that a political coalition used this mechanism to select its sole candidate. Participation in these primaries required prior registration of voters, and there was no law or support from the Election Certification Court (Tricel) or the Electoral Service (Servel) to regulate them.

The Christian Democratic Party (PDC) chose Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle, the son of former President Eduardo Frei Montalva, as their candidate. Frei Ruiz-Tagle had previously run as a pre-candidate for the Concertación in the 1989 presidential election, but was unsuccessful. He then focused on strengthening his position within the PDC and achieved this by winning a senatorial election in the Santiago Oriente constituency in 1989 and becoming the party's president in 1990.

The other pre-candidate was Ricardo Lagos Escobar, a prominent leader of the Party for Democracy (PPD), who also had the support of the Socialist Party (PS) due to his participation in the "No" campaign in the 1988 plebiscite. Lagos had run as a senatorial candidate for the Santiago Poniente constituency in 1989, but despite finishing second, he lost due to the workings of the binomial electoral system. In 1990, he became Minister of Education in the Aylwin government, a position he held until 1992 when he left to begin his presidential campaign.

An unsuccessful attempt was made to nominate Senator Anselmo Sule of the Radical Party (PR) and Cristián Reitze, president of the Humanist Green Alliance party, as candidates. Reitze later left the Concertación after realizing that there was a move to exclude him from the primary.

On May 23, 1993, the primaries were held, and Frei won by 64% of the vote, officially becoming the candidate on May 30. The PS and PPD respected the outcome and supported the chosen candidate.

Unión por el Progreso de Chile

In 1992, the largest right-wing party at the time, Renovación Nacional (RN), had two presidential pre-candidates: Senator for Santiago Oriente Sebastián Piñera and Deputy for Las Condes, Vitacura, and Lo Barnechea Evelyn Matthei. However, the aftermath of the Piñeragate political scandal that same year put an end to their aspirations, prompting RN to search for a new candidate. Manuel Feliú was ultimately selected as the replacement.[2]

The Independent Democratic Union (UDI) initially nominated Jovino Novoa, its president, as its pre-candidate. However, there was a third candidate who gained support from various right-wing parties, particularly the UDI. This candidate was Arturo Alessandri Besa, an independent senator for Antofagasta who had family ties to two former presidents: Jorge Alessandri and Arturo Alessandri Palma.

A convention was held on August 8, 1993, at the Diego Portales Building to choose the coalition's candidate. The parties had been in conflict for several months over the mechanism for selecting the sole candidate, even considering primaries and who would run in them.

José Piñera Echenique, the former Labor Minister in the government led by Augusto Pinochet and brother of Senator Piñera, withdrew from the convention because he believed that the bloc's candidate should be elected through primaries. Additionally, Francisco Javier Errázuriz was considered as a potential candidate, supported by his party, the Union of Center-Center (UCC), the National Party (PN), and the Party of the South (SUR). However, negotiations over parliamentary seats led him to abandon his decision.[3]

A total of 1,847 delegates from the coalition participated in the convention, including 547 from RN, 449 from UDI, 391 from the UCC, 46 from SUR, and 44 from the PN. The result of the first vote was as follows, in the order of the vote:[4]

CandidatePartyVotes%Result
Arturo Alessandri BesaIndependent88556.48Nominee
Manuel Feliú [es]National Renewal60738.74
Jovino NovoaIndependent Democratic Union754.79
Total1,567100.00

As per the agreed terms, a second vote had to be held if no candidate obtained more than two-thirds of the total votes. However, after the results of the first vote were announced, Feliú withdrew his candidacy in favor of Alessandri.[5]

Despite efforts, Alessandri's presidential campaign failed to attract voters. With the realization that winning the presidential election was highly unlikely, the right-wing parties shifted their focus towards the parliamentary elections, diverting their economic resources to prevent the Concertación from gaining the required number of parliamentarians needed to block their intended constitutional reforms.

Cristián Reitze Campos (AHV)

After the Humanist Green Alliance (AHV) withdrew from the Concertación, they launched the candidacy of Cristián Reitze, who based his campaign on the humanist principles of Silo, as well as the parliamentary work of the former AHV representative for La Reina and Peñalolén, Laura Rodríguez.

Movimiento de Izquierda Democrática Allendista

The Movimiento de Izquierda Democrática Allendista (MIDA), which was primarily led by the Communist Party, organized an assembly attended by around 2,000 people to nominate their candidate from a list of five names: Eduardo Gutiérrez, Manuel Cabieses, Communist leader Gladys Marín, Deputy Mario Palestro (who withdrew before the vote during the assembly), and priest Eugenio Pizarro.[6] The results of the vote were as follows:

CandidateVotes%Result
Gladys Marín Millie1,11742.63Nominee
Eugenio Pizarro Poblete1,00238.24
Manuel Cabieses39715.15
Eduardo Gutiérrez1043.97
Total2,620100.00

Marín emerged as the initial winner, but due to the close vote, a second round of deliberation was held, resulting in the selection of Pizarro as the MIDA candidate. His candidacy was officially registered with the Servel through the collection of signatures, as required for any independent candidacy under Law 18,700.[7]

Pizarro's campaign was known for its aggressive and tough tone, representing the left wing that identified with the policies of the Salvador Allende-led Popular Unity government.

Manfred Max-Neef (independent)

Manfred Max-Neef, an independent ecologist and economist, was also a candidate for the election with support from various social organizations, Mapuche communities, and sectors of the Christian Left, MAPU, and the Workers' Party.[8] His campaign aimed to give voice to issues that were absent from public opinion, strengthen civil society, and create a scaled economy as an alternative to the alleged prevailing neoliberalism. He also positioned himself as completely horizontal on the political spectrum, which allowed him to attract votes from the Concertación, the right, the MIDA, and the AHV.

José Piñera (independent)

José Piñera launched his candidacy in January, but when he realized that Unión por el Progreso de Chile closed its doors to him, he continued on his own path. He began as a representative of people who did not identify with the political class, but later represented sectors identified with Pinochet and the dictatorship. As a result, he received support from collaborators of that dictatorship, such as Mónica Madariaga and Sergio Melnick, among others. He managed to take a considerable number of votes away from Alessandri's candidacy.

Failed candidacies

Juan Antonio Torres Araya, a representative of the Retirees' Party, was considered as a potential candidate but his candidacy did not succeed because the Electoral Service (Servel) rejected over half of the signatures submitted to register his candidacy.[8] He eventually threw his support behind Alessandri.

The independent candidacy of Gonzalo Townsend Pinochet, the nephew of Augusto Pinochet, was successfully registered. Despite having run as a candidate for the Union of Center Center in the San Joaquín commune's municipal elections the previous year,[9] Townsend aimed to represent the Acción Pinochetista Unitaria, a defender of the dictatorship's work, in the general election. However, after two weeks, Servel invalidated the candidacy as the candidacy had been sponsored by "more than 5% of people affiliated with political parties".[10]

After his candidacy was rejected by the electoral agency, Gonzalo Townsend made a request that was ultimately denied. He accused the process of being a ploy to prevent his participation as a candidate and finally called for casting a null vote in the presidential elections.

Results

President

CandidatePartyVotes%
Eduardo Frei Ruiz-TagleConcertación (PDC)4,040,49757.98
Arturo Alessandri BesaUnion for the Progress of Chile (Ind.)1,701,32424.41
José PiñeraIndependent430,9506.18
Manfred Max NeefEcologist Movement (ECO)387,1025.55
Eugenio PizarroLeftist Democratic Alternative (Ind.)327,4024.70
Cristián ReitzeHumanist Green Alliance (AHV)81,6751.17
Total6,968,950100.00
Valid votes6,968,95094.47
Invalid/blank votes407,7415.53
Total votes7,376,691100.00
Registered voters/turnout8,085,49391.23
Source: SERVEL

Senate

Party or allianceVotes%Seats
WonNot upTotal+/–
ConcertaciónChristian Democratic Party378,98720.2249130
Socialist Party of Chile238,40512.72325+5
Party for Democracy275,72714.71224–2
Radical Party of Chile119,4596.37011–1
Independents27,2531.45000–3
Total1,039,83155.4891221–1
Union for the Progress of ChileNational Renewal279,58014.925611+6
Independent Democratic Union190,28310.15213+1
Party of the South52,5092.800000
Union of the Centrist Center46,4552.48101+1
Independents130,5876.97112–7
Total699,41437.329817+1
Leftist Democratic AlternativeCommunist Party of Chile65,0733.47000New
Popular Unitary Action Movement3,0300.16000New
Independents13,2780.710000
Total81,3814.340000
The New LeftHumanist Green Alliance8,5280.460000
Independents3,7400.200000
Total12,2680.650000
Independents41,2332.200000
Appointed senators088–1
Total1,874,127100.00182846–1
Valid votes1,874,12791.61
Invalid/blank votes171,5548.39
Total votes2,045,681100.00
Registered voters/turnout2,265,56090.29
Source: SERVEL, Nohlen

Chamber of Deputies

Party or allianceVotes%Seats+/–
ConcertaciónChristian Democratic Party1,827,37327.1237–1
Socialist Party of Chile803,71911.9315New
Party for Democracy798,20611.8415–1
Radical Party of Chile200,8372.982–3
Chilean Social Democracy Party53,3770.790New
Independents49,7640.741–8
Total3,733,27655.40700
Union for the Progress of ChileNational Renewal1,098,85216.31290
Independent Democratic Union816,10412.1115+4
Union of the Centrist Center216,6393.212New
Party of the South13,4220.2000
National Party2,6880.0400
Independents324,0844.814–4
Total2,471,78936.6850+2
Leftist Democratic AlternativeCommunist Party of Chile336,0344.990New
Popular Unitary Action Movement6,6440.100New
Independents87,8171.300
Total430,4956.3900
The New LeftHumanist Green Alliance67,7331.010–1
Ecologist Movement2,2150.030New
Independents26,2470.390
Total96,1951.430–1
Independents7,1040.110–1
Total6,738,859100.001200
Valid votes6,738,85991.25
Invalid/blank votes646,1578.75
Total votes7,385,016100.00
Registered voters/turnout8,085,49391.34
Source: SERVEL

References

  1. ^ Dieter Nohlen (2005) Elections in the Americas: A data handbook, Volume II, p262 ISBN 978-0-19-928358-3
  2. ^ "Confesión de Evelyn Matthei de su participación en caso 'Grabación de Sebastián Piñera' o Piñeragate". Apocatastasis. December 2001. Retrieved 20 July 2013.
  3. ^ "Errazuriz anuncia candidatura presidencial". El Mercurio. 25 July 1993. p. C3.
  4. ^ "La convención del 93 en que se eligió a Arturo Alessandri B." El Mercurio. 23 July 2013. Retrieved 23 July 2013.
  5. ^ "La convención del 93 en que se eligió a Arturo Alessandri B." El Mercurio. 23 July 2013. Retrieved 23 July 2013.
  6. ^ "Los cinco naipes del MIDA". La Tercera. 17 January 1993.
  7. ^ "Inscritos 7 candidatos". El Mercurio. 14 August 1993. p. A 23.
  8. ^ a b "Inscritos siete candidatos". El Mercurio. 14 August 1993. p. A 23.
  9. ^ "Elecciones municipales 1992". Servicio Electoral. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  10. ^ "Resolución 1416; acepta y rechaza declaraciones de candidaturas a Presidente de la República que señala". 25 August 1993. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
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