Government activates “silver bullets” and excludes seven key positions from ADP system

President José Antonio Kast's government has formalized decrees excluding seven strategic positions from the High Public Management (ADP) system, allowing direct appointments. The measures, published in the Official Gazette, impact services such as Fonasa, Conadi, and the Labor Directorate.

The Chilean government, led by President José Antonio Kast, has activated the so-called “silver bullets”, a tool under Law N° 19.882 regulating the High Public Management (ADP) system. It allows the Executive to directly appoint up to 12 service heads at the start of the term, bypassing public competitions, to expedite placements in key areas during the early months. Decrees formalized by the Ministry of Finance in the Official Gazette exclude from ADP the positions of national director of the National Migration Service, Labor Director, director of the National Indigenous Development Corporation (Conadi), director of the National Health Fund (Fonasa), executive director of the Environmental Assessment Service (SEA), fiscal of the Ministry of Public Works (MOP), and Health Superintendent. Confirmed appointments include Jorge Trujillo at the Internal Revenue Service (SII), David Oddó at the Labor Directorate, and Frank Sauerbaum at the National Migration Service. These roles are key for economic reforms in taxation and labor oversight. The action occurs amid political tensions, with union and opposition criticism over budget cuts, suspensions of labor initiatives, and reviews of environmental and indigenous policies. The President can also request resignations from other executives, appointing proxies pending competitions.

関連記事

Illustration of tense standoff between Boric government officials and Kast's Republican team over public sector bill restrictions in Chile.
AIによって生成された画像

First frictions between Boric government and Kast team over public readjustment

AIによるレポート AIによって生成された画像

Gabriel Boric's government included provisions in the public sector readjustment bill restricting civil servant dismissals, drawing criticism from president-elect José Antonio Kast's team, who call them a breach of trust. Arturo Squella, Republican Party president, warned that these measures undermine relations between administrations. The executive defends them as formalizing existing rules.

The Chilean government seeks to include in the public sector readjustment bill a norm requiring justification for dismissing contract workers, sparking debate as opposition labels it a 'tie-down law'. Nearly 70% of the 411,136 central administration workers are under this contract type, mostly professionals. The Finance Minister defends the measure as protection against arbitrariness.

AIによるレポート

The Civil Service reports that 134 institutions are led by women for the first time after winning public contests. Currently, 439 women hold directorial positions, representing 38% of the 1,164 active posts. This progress reflects efforts since 2022 to reduce gender gaps in public administration.

Following initial backlash from president-elect José Antonio Kast's team, President Gabriel Boric's government detailed its protocol—part of the public sector adjustment bill—to protect career civil servants while ending trust positions on March 11, 2026. Ministers emphasized the measures formalize existing rules and require congressional approval.

AIによるレポート

After Gabriel Boric's government ended and José Antonio Kast took office, several former undersecretaries have taken up new roles in Congress, municipalities, and academia. Figures like Nicolás Facuse and Luna Follegati now serve as parliamentary advisors, while others seek positions in the private sector or education.

Two experts diverge on PEC 38/2025, a proposed administrative reform under consideration in Brazil's Chamber of Deputies. One supports it for promoting efficiency and cost reduction, while the other warns of risks to public service precarization and loss of server rights.

AIによるレポート

José Antonio Kast's government withdrew 47 environmental and electrical supreme decrees from the Comptroller General of the Republic that were pushed by the previous administration. The ministries of Environment and Energy describe it as a routine review. Critics see it as a setback.

 

 

 

このウェブサイトはCookieを使用します

サイトを改善するための分析にCookieを使用します。詳細については、プライバシーポリシーをお読みください。
拒否