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Chile elects first woman president

Socialist pediatrician Michelle Bachelet was elected Chile’s first woman president on Sunday as her opponent conceded that the former political prisoner had won.
BACHELET
Socialist candidate Michelle Bachelet and her daughters, Sofia, left, and Francisca, right, celebrate after the run-off presidential elections in Santiago, Chile, on Sunday.Roberto Candia / AP
/ Source: msnbc.com news services

Chilean president-elect Michelle Bachelet, a Socialist who will be the country’s first female leader, vowed on Monday to shrink the gap between rich and poor that persists in the South American nation despite lower poverty and a thriving economy.

Bachelet, from Chile’s ruling center-left coalition, won 53 percent of ballots cast in Sunday’s election while opposition candidate Sebastian Pinera took 47 percent, the government Electoral Service said.

The 54-year-old medical doctor, who was imprisoned and tortured during the 1973-1990 Augusto Pinochet dictatorship before living in exile abroad, will be the fourth consecutive president from the center-left alliance that has run Chile since 1990.

“Chile needs to unite behind the goals of reducing poverty and creating more equal opportunities so that everyone can benefit from what the country has to offer,” Bachelet said after meeting with outgoing President Ricardo Lagos and Roman Catholic church leaders.

An agnostic with three children from two relationships, Bachelet benefited from a shift to more secular values in Chile, which has had a reputation historically as one of the region’s most socially conservative countries.

Bachelet, who is to assume office in March, is expected to be a pragmatic leftist, following in the footsteps of widely popular Lagos, whose fiscal discipline won over many right-leaning skeptics.

Mrs. President


“We have all been pleased with Mrs. President’s capacity to approach people and her empathy, how she cares about the poor and those who are marginalized, and how she cares about children’s well-being through the well-being of the family,” said Francisco Javier Errazuriz, Santiago’s archbishop.

A former defense minister, Bachelet is only the second woman elected to head a South American nation after Janet Jagan of Guyana was chosen to succeed her husband as president in 1997 after he died.

Everyone from babies in Bachelet headbands to elderly couples and tattooed young people joined in the street revelry that crowded Santiago’s main boulevard on Sunday night.

Political scientist Ricardo Israel said a main challenge for Bachelet will be to bring more women into public office, and to find a place for her social-democratic coalition within the range of leftist governments taking hold in Latin America.

Israel said she would have to balance the need to maintain good global relations, particularly with the United States, so Chile can keep benefiting from global free trade, while guaranteeing a steady natural gas supply from its neighbors.

Bachelet has promised to make half her cabinet women, and she told tens of thousands of confetti-throwing supporters she will work to improve social security and education by the time her four-year term ends in 2010.

Latin America leans left
A Bachelet victory consolidates a shift to the left in Latin America, where leftists now run Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay and Venezuela, some with politics more extreme than others.

Socialist Evo Morales will soon take office in gas-rich Bolivia, and a leftist is favored to win Mexico’s July presidential election.

“I think she will have to make one decision very soon, which is whether or not to attend the inauguration of Evo Morales, which is on January 22,” Israel said, alluding to traditional tensions between the two neighbors.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez praised Bachelet’s tenacity and pledged his government’s collaboration with Chile, Venezuela’s presidential press office reported.