By John Fund
Monday, December 15, 2025
The news that José Antonio Kast, a longtime free-market
and anti-communist figure in Chile, won that country’s presidency in a
landslide on Sunday was met with some interesting international reactions.
Nicolás Maduro, Venezuela’s dictator, had no official
comment, though his diplomats privately scoffed that Chile was now back in the
grip of “the United States empire” and would do its bidding.
Javier Milei, Argentina’s libertarian president, posted
his enthusiastic support on social media: “One more step for our region in
defence of life, liberty, and private property. I am sure we will work together
so that the Americas embrace the ideas of freedom and we can free ourselves
from the oppressive yoke of 21st-century socialism.”
Since his election in 2023, Milei has accomplished a
renaissance of Argentina’s economy, and he can be pleased that his success
inspired Chileans to move in his direction. So much so that Kast’s victory
margin of 58 percent over left-winger Jeannette Jara’s 42 percent exceeded the
twelve-point margin by which Milei beat the left-wing Peronists in 2023.
Chile and Argentina are but the latest examples of Latin
American nations swinging to the right in the past two years. Ecuador, Bolivia,
Venezuela, and Honduras have also seen the electoral defeat of left-wing
administrations — although foreign observers note that Venezuela’s Maduro has
remained in power only through massive voter fraud.
Kast’s victory hinged on three key issues that angered a
majority of Chilean voters and on which he offered specific solutions.
Crime
In a 2025 Gallup survey on global safety, less than 40 percent
of Chileans feel safe walking alone at night where they live.
As the New York Times has reported, Chile’s violent-crime rate grew during Covid and
has remained high. The increase has been fueled in part by violent gangs and
international criminal organizations that have infiltrated the country.
Immigration
Chile is a nation of 20 million people, of which at least
2 million are recent immigrants — of which a large chunk are illegal, putting a
strain on social services. Criminal gangs recruit members from the ranks of
illegals and also prey on Venezuelan immigrants crossing into Chile over its
borders with Peru and Bolivia.
Economic Growth
From 1980 to 2020, Chile experienced an economic miracle.
It peacefully emerged from a dictatorship and implemented free market policies
that made it the richest country on the continent. Poverty fell from 45 percent
to 6 percent of the population. Per capita income since 1990 tripled, to
$24,000 a year.
That miracle was created by Chilean students of Milton
Friedman. They created the freest economy in the developing world, built on a
foundation of property rights, free trade, a low flat tax, private personal
retirement accounts replacing the social-security system, and the deregulation
of key industries.
But over those four decades, the left steadily
infiltrated the nation’s cultural institutions: schools, universities,
churches, and media. The result of this indoctrination, combined with growing
concerns about inequality and hikes in tuition fees, led to the 2021 victory of
35-year-old former student-protester Gabriel Boric as the new president of
Chile. The Communist Party became a part of his governing coalition.
Boric tried to implement his vision of “social justice.”
But a constitutional rewrite he supported crashed and burned, 62 to 38 percent
in a 2022 referendum. Boric’s economic policy saw an expansion of regulations
and taxes. As a result, Chile’s economy stagnated, with today’s unemployment at
9 percent and economic growth at just over 2 percent.
Boric’s approval rating fell to below 30 percent. That
gave José Antonio Kast, whose family played a role in shaping Chile’s economic
reforms in the 1980s, an opening to run for president on a promise to return to
Chile’s free market model. He proposed to trim regulations, cut corporate
taxes, and slash public spending by 7 percent in just over one year. Kast has
predicted the his program will increase growth to 4 percent a year.
Kast called his platform — crime, immigration, and
economic growth — a three-legged stool that would “make Chile great again.”
He also loosened up his style from his two previous
failed presidential races. Gone were endless speeches; in were short TikTok
videos showing him actively campaigning. The playing of patriotic music at
rallies was downplayed in favor of a Spotify “Disco Kast” called “la Fuerza del
Cambio” — the Force of Change. It featured hard rock, K-pop, reggae, and
reggaeton, and it won the top
spot on Spotify’s Chile list.
Kast’s campaign did more than borrow from U.S. political
tactics. Bloomberg reports that his landslide win “propels Chile
into a U.S.-Led Conservative Orbit” that will find a friendly welcome in Donald
Trump’s White House.
The Wall Street Journal editorial page agrees and
suggests that Trump should help Kast by “reducing tariffs on Chile and making
it a trade and economic partner.” Latin American voters who are embracing
conservative policies and values deserve that helping hand. If their countries
become strong and free, it will only help the U.S.’s security and economy.
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