President José Antonio Kast reshuffling cabinet amid high poll support in a formal office setting
President José Antonio Kast reshuffling cabinet amid high poll support in a formal office setting
Imagen generada por IA

Kast realiza cambio de gabinete con alto apoyo en encuestas

Imagen generada por IA

El presidente José Antonio Kast removió esta semana a Trinidad Steinert del Ministerio de Seguridad Pública y a Mara Sedini de la vocería de gobierno. Encuestas de Cadem y Descifra muestran que entre el 87% y el 88% de los consultados aprueba el ajuste ministerial.

El cambio ocurrió el martes pasado, apenas 69 días después de iniciado el gobierno. Kast designó a Martín Arrau en Seguridad Pública, a Claudio Alvarado como biministro de vocería y a Louis de Grange en Obras Públicas además de Transportes.

La encuesta Cadem, con 1.006 casos, reveló que el 48% atribuye el ajuste a la mala gestión de las exministras. Un 68% considera que el cambio es positivo para el país, mientras que un 39% cree que mejorará el enfrentamiento a la delincuencia.

Por su parte, el sondeo Descifra, realizado con 1.015 respuestas, indicó que el 89% apoya la salida de Steinert y el 92% la de Sedini. Un 46% estima que el ajuste se ejecutó a tiempo.

Artículos relacionados

President José Antonio Kast announcing cabinet reshuffle at a press conference.
Imagen generada por IA

Kast announces fastest cabinet change since return to democracy

Reportado por IA Imagen generada por IA

President José Antonio Kast announced Tuesday the departure of ministers Trinidad Steinert and Mara Sedini in a cabinet adjustment that comes just 69 days into his term.

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.

Reportado por IA

Opposition lawmakers decided to drop the interpellation of the security minister after Tuesday's cabinet reshuffle. The move aims to give new holder Martín Arrau time to settle in.

President José Antonio Kast held a meeting on Monday with Republican Party deputies at Cerro Castillo Presidential Palace. The gathering aims to ease tensions sparked by the clash between party leader Arturo Squella and Second Floor chief Alejandro Irarrázaval.

Reportado por IA

Two polls published on Sunday, March 29, show declining approval for President José Antonio Kast less than three weeks into his term amid a historic fuel price hike crisis. Cadem reported 51% disapproval against 43% approval, while Criteria found 47% disapproval versus 43% approval.

Building on its March announcement of 20 priority bills, José Antonio Kast's government has assigned urgencies to 70 bills total—five of its own and 65 sponsored—prioritizing security, justice, and migration. Nine have already been enacted into law.

Reportado por IA

President José Antonio Kast's government has seen 18 seremis fail to take office or resign since March 11, in under 50 days. The situation has drawn internal scrutiny to the background check team led by Ignacio Dülger, Álvaro Bellolio, and Víctor Valdés. Cases stem from requirement failures, personal motives, or political reasons.

 

 

 

Este sitio web utiliza cookies

Utilizamos cookies para análisis con el fin de mejorar nuestro sitio. Lee nuestra política de privacidad para más información.
Rechazar