PS secures two seats on Senate's key Finance Committee

Chile's Socialist Party secured two seats on the strategic Senate Finance Committee, while Renovación Nacional claimed the most seats across legislative commissions. This agreement, stemming from party negotiations, sets presidencies and memberships for coming years. The commissions were formed after a prolonged session last week.

The formation of legislative commissions in Chile's Senate progressed last week during an extended plenary session. Senators submitted proposals to the board, which approved the allocation without debate, enabling most committees to convene.

Renovación Nacional benefits most, with 90 seats across commissions for the four-year term (2026-2030). For the first year, its members will chair Foreign Relations (Manuel José Ossandón), Public Works (María José Gatica), Transport (Camila Flores), Fishing (Carlos Kuschel), and Future (Rojo Edwards). The Socialist Party follows with 81 seats, holding presidencies in Interior Government (Danisa Astudillo), Economy (Gastón Saavedra), and Health (Juan Luis Castro).

On the pivotal Finance Committee, which reviews economic bills and fiscal spending, the PS gained two seats: Paulina Vodanovic and Daniella Cicardini for this year. Vodanovic will lead it in 2028, alongside the Constitution Committee, crucial for judicial laws and constitutional changes.

Parties like PPD (69 seats), Republican Party (47), and UDI (34) fill the rest. Opposition negotiations sparked tensions; DC Senator Iván Flores decried the process as 'confused,' saying his party felt sidelined like 'the ham in the sandwich.' The PS-PPD-PL bloc dealt directly with the right, outpacing the DC-FA-PC-FRVS group (78 total seats).

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Illustration depicting ruling coalition's control of most Chamber committees, including Finance and Constitution, amid opposition rift.
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Ruling coalition takes control of most committees in Chamber

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On Tuesday, March 17, 2026, the ruling coalition secured a majority in 15 of the 27 permanent committees of the Chamber of Deputies, including the key Finance and Constitution committees. The deal reinforced the board agreement, incorporating the DC party, but highlighted a rift between PS and PPD in the opposition.

In a key step for President Claudia Sheinbaum's electoral reform—initially unveiled February 25 and formally presented March 4 as the 'decálogo por la democracia' (see prior coverage)—the Chamber of Deputies' Constitutional Points and Political-Electoral Reform committees approved the proposal on March 10, 2026, by 45-39 votes. It heads to plenary discussion, likely March 11, amid PVEM and PT opposition despite their Morena alliance.

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Mexico's Senate commissions on Constitutional Points and Legislative Studies approved President Claudia Sheinbaum's 'Plan B' electoral reform bill on March 24, following its presentation a week earlier. The measure passed with 24 votes in favor and 11 against after over five hours of debate and now heads to the full Senate, despite PT opposition to the 2027 revocation referendum date.

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Mexico's Senate approved the Plan B electoral reform with 87 votes in favor and 41 against, removing proposed changes to presidential recall via a Partido del Trabajo (PT) reserve. The measure aims to cut costs and privileges at the National Electoral Institute (INE) and other bodies. President Claudia Sheinbaum hailed the privilege cuts but regretted the recall omission.

 

 

 

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