Kast opens door to exceptions in 3% ministry budget cuts

President José Antonio Kast said in his first radio interview from La Moneda that exceptions will be evaluated case by case in the 3% budget cuts ordered by Hacienda to ministries. He confirmed analyzing salary reductions for executive authorities amid the fuel price crisis. He also backed questioned ministers and defended his emergency government's priorities.

In an interview with the Asociación de Radiodifusores de Chile (ARCHI) on Tuesday, March 31, President José Antonio Kast defended not cutting the Security Ministry's budget, one day after reversing the initial measure affecting Carabineros and PDI.

"[The government] is seeing that everyone carries out the cut exercise and once that's clear, how to establish it, how to present it, we're going to see in which places the cut takes effect and in which not," Kast explained. He assured the 3% is even for all but opened the door to exceptions in key portfolios like Housing, Defense, Health, and Education, per meetings by Finance Minister Jorge Quiroz with the Budget Directorate.

He also confirmed evaluating salary cuts for executive authorities, distinguishing structural from transitory announcements, though changes to his pay require congressional approval, which he ruled out.

Kast backed Security Minister Trinidad Steinert on the removal of retired Prefect Consuelo Peña from PDI, attributing it to the top police authority, Eduardo Cerna. "The decision is of the PDI's top authority," he stated, despite criticism from lawmakers like Senator Iván Flores (DC), who questioned the "institutionalization of the lie." He also defended Women Minister Judith Marín over Priscilla Carrasco's exit from SernamEG.

The president prioritized social urgencies over cultural policies, ruling out ideological battles, and announced modifications to the state of exception in La Araucanía, with restrictions in Temucuicui.

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President José Antonio Kast reshuffling cabinet amid high poll support in a formal office setting
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Kast reshuffles cabinet amid strong poll support

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

President José Antonio Kast removed Trinidad Steinert from the Public Security Ministry and Mara Sedini from the government spokesperson role this week. Polls by Cadem and Descifra show between 87% and 88% of respondents approve the cabinet adjustment.

President José Antonio Kast led his administration's fourth cabinet meeting on Thursday at Cerro Castillo, following Tuesday's ministerial adjustment that removed two ministers.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

President José Antonio Kast completed a cabinet adjustment on May 19, the fastest since the return to democracy. The departures included ministers Mara Sedini and Trinidad Steinert. Days later, additional modifications were recorded in the team at the Segundo Piso of La Moneda.

President José Antonio Kast downplayed recent controversies in his administration on Tuesday during an event in Rengo, where he delivered property titles to families in the O’Higgins Region. He backed ministers Iván Poduje and Jorge Quiroz, urging focus on substance over form in debates on the Wetlands Law, education, and public finances.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Following initial controversy over education cuts outlined in Hacienda's April 21 memo, Chile's Treasury revealed the full scope: urging 22 ministries to eliminate 142 social programs and cut 260 others for $6 billion in savings in the 2027 budget. The proposal, tied to Finance Minister Jorge Quiroz's tax reform push emphasizing full employment as the ideal social policy, has drawn sharp criticism from scientists, unions, and opposition leaders.

Chile's Public Security Minister Trinidad Steinert and Undersecretary Andrés Jouannet missed a key Senate Finance Commission session on modernizing Carabineros, forcing its suspension. The incident drew criticism from both opposition and government lawmakers. A Segpres minister apologized for the coordination failure instead.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

President José Antonio Kast underwent a drug test on Wednesday morning at a medical center in Las Condes, his first since taking office. The action addresses opposition criticism over delays in ministers' tests, despite an existing law. Kast announced reforms to bolster integrity, including periodic tests for lawmakers.

 

 

 

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