Absence of minister Steinert suspends session on Carabineros reform in senate

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.

The Senate Finance Commission, chaired by UDI Senator Javier Macaya, suspended a session aimed at advancing the bill to modernize Carabineros, a priority initiative of the executive. Lawmakers deemed the absence of Public Security Ministry's top officials, Minister Trinidad Steinert and Undersecretary Andrés Jouannet, improper and chose not to proceed.

Instead, General Secretariat of the Presidency Minister José García attended and stated: “We had a lack of coordination and I reiterate my apologies to the commission.” At the same time, Steinert was in Santiago with President José Antonio Kast at an event in the Central Criminalistics Laboratory of the PDI alongside its director, Eduardo Cerna.

Criticism came from across the aisle. Macaya called it “lamentable,” saying: “it is very regrettable that no one from the Ministry of Security showed up.” Independent Senator Rodolfo Carter labeled it an “unpresentable error,” adding: “It ruins the whole narrative” and “this is not an accident, this is sloppiness.”

UDI Deputy Guillermo Ramírez blamed coordination failures: “The mistake was that the ministry did not send a replacement.” The episode adds to prior questions about Steinert's management, such as her role in the exit of retired PDI prefect Consuelo Peña, amid security as a core pillar of President Kast's government.

관련 기사

Illustration of Security Minister Steinert defending PDI official's resignation before skeptical opposition in congressional hearing.
AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

Opposition questions Steinert's explanations for Peña's PDI exit

AI에 의해 보고됨 AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

Security Minister Trinidad Steinert defended the exit of PDI Intelligence Subdirector Consuelo Peña before the Chamber of Deputies' Security Committee as an institutional decision. Opponents expressed skepticism and announced citations and possible interpellation. The case links to a prior memo on the Clan Chen investigation.

Security Minister Trinidad Steinert denied before the Senate Security Committee any involvement in the exit of PDI's former Intelligence subdirector, Consuelo Peña, and dismissed rumors of a romantic relationship with a subprefect. Steinert expressed discomfort over reports linking her time as regional prosecutor in Tarapacá to the decision. She also presented the government's Integral Public Security Plan.

AI에 의해 보고됨

Paulina Vodanovic, president of the Socialist Party, criticized Security Minister Trinidad Steinert's lack of strategy and the government's economic megareform. UDI president Guillermo Ramírez defended Steinert, calling her statements reasonable. The criticisms arise 50 days into José Antonio Kast's government.

José Antonio Kast's government held its first expanded political committee on Monday at La Moneda, where Segpres Minister José García announced urgencies for 20 bills, mainly on security and migration. Three initiatives received immediate discussion, including classifying irregular entry as a crime. The announcement comes amid internal criticisms over possible pardons and limits to free higher education.

AI에 의해 보고됨

New Interior and Segegob biminister Claudio Alvarado defended the May 19 cabinet adjustment driven by President José Antonio Kast. He highlighted the need to strengthen the security agenda and improve government coordination.

President José Antonio Kast's government has delayed entry of its controversial 'National Reconstruction Plan'—recently renamed the 'economic reactivation reform'—into Congress until next week. Initially announced in March with an expected April 1 entry, the postponement allows final reviews and shifts focus to school security following a deadly incident in Calama.

AI에 의해 보고됨

Chile's Ministry of Public Security has expanded its complaint against three UACh students charged in the April attack on Science Minister Ximena Lincolao, invoking the State Security Law—a move declared admissible by a judge amid debates over the ministry's authority.

 

 

 

이 웹사이트는 쿠키를 사용합니다

사이트를 개선하기 위해 분석을 위한 쿠키를 사용합니다. 자세한 내용은 개인정보 보호 정책을 읽으세요.
거부