Chile's Communist Party called for broad mobilizations against the incoming government of José Antonio Kast, sparking intense debate within the left on opposition strategy. While some sectors reject social agitation, others back unitary actions to defend rights. This rift emerges 75 days before the handover on March 11, 2026.
In the report from the Communist Party's (PC) latest central committee, published this week, it proposes 'impulsing broad and unitary mobilization milestones, such as a massive March 8, May 1, and others', to defend rights and counter 'authoritarian and regressive trends' in Kast's government.
This call has deepened divisions in the left, still part of President Gabriel Boric's coalition. In Socialismo Democrático, grouping PS and PPD, it faces strong rejection. Senator Juan Luis Castro warned that 'one thing is the natural defense of social rights [...] and another is centering on social agitation as a method of political action'. Senator Pedro Araya stressed distinguishing 'effective defense of rights from the temptation to use mobilization as a response mechanism to electoral results'.
Similarly, in the Christian Democratic Party (DC), Deputy Eric Aedo urged caution, rejecting mobilizations 'as a political and violent weapon to destabilize governments'. The Green Regionalist Social Federation, via Jaime Mulet, deems protesting 'just to protest' before the new government invalid, but valid if vulnerable rights are threatened, always peacefully.
In contrast, Deputy Jaime Sáez (FA) backed the call, seeing it as 'tremendously important' to recover 'social unity' against an 'authoritarian drift'. Liberal Party president Juan Carlos Urzúa viewed it as logical and would join when fitting. Jaime Quintana (PPD) denied an insurrectional tone, and Tomás Hirsch (Humanist Action) defended non-violent mobilization as the driver of historical changes.
From the PC, Juan Andrés Lagos lamented the weakening of social expressions in Chile. Interior Minister Álvaro Elizalde recalled the right to demonstrate 'always peacefully'. A left-wing conclave in January aims to consolidate opposition.
From the right, Republican Deputy Álvaro Carter criticized the PC and FA's 'belicose reaction', warning against destabilizations like in 2018 and urging focus on Congress, not streets.