Kast government sets first legislative urgencies on security

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.

On Monday around 11 a.m., leaders and bench heads from the government coalition parties—Partido Republicano, UDI, RN, Evópoli, and PSC—met at La Moneda with ministers from Segpres, Segegob, Hacienda, Desarrollo Social, Economía, Relaciones Exteriores, and Energía. Segpres Minister José García (RN) outlined 20 priority initiatives on security, fiscal, and social matters, as the 'Plan de Reconstrucción Nacional' is set to enter Congress next week. Immediate discussion was assigned to three bills: classifying irregular entry as a crime (already in Congress, targeting dispatch in six days), reforming to transfer Gendarmería to the Ministry of Security, and creating the Subsistema de Inteligencia Económica. Suma urgencia (15 days) for the constitutional reform on foreigners' entry and stay, strengthening perimeter security in prisons and public transport, restricting benefits to irregular migrants, and reform of sports anonymous societies, among others. Simple urgency (30 days) for extending flagrancy period and more. Government spokesperson Mara Sedini stated that 'today we discussed with political parties and parliamentarians what the legislative agenda will be, the main measures the President will take in the first weeks.' UDI leader Guillermo Ramírez noted that 'these projects are urgent' and focus on security. However, internal concerns arose: Deputy Diego Schalper (RN) criticized the gratuidad limit to age 30. On possible pardons for Carabineros and Armed Forces personnel from the social outbreak, Jorge Alessandri (UDI) said he 'would not have raised the pardons issue at the start of the government,' Ximena Ossandón (RN) saw it as a distraction, and Marco Antonio Sulantay (UDI) called it a 'distractivo'.

Makala yanayohusiana

Chilean President Kast announces delay of economic plan for school security focus after Calama incident.
Picha iliyoundwa na AI

Government postpones National Reconstruction Plan submission to Congress amid security priorities

Imeripotiwa na AI Picha iliyoundwa na AI

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.

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.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Ten days have passed since José Antonio Kast assumed Chile's presidency, marked by high activity in security, economy, and education. The government has prioritized police actions, housing reconstruction, and fiscal adjustments. Key ministers lead coordinated initiatives under a 'Hub' model.

Government spokesperson Mara Sedini defended the Security and Housing ministers' work on Tuesday amid criticisms. She highlighted a robust security agenda with over 6,300 detentions and backed Housing Minister Iván Poduje's on-the-ground approach. She also reaffirmed commitment to the Truth and Childhood Commission.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Justice Minister Fernando Rabat told the Senate Human Rights Commission on Tuesday that there are about 28 pending pardon requests, eight filed since March 11, 2026. Senator Fabiola Campillai questioned the criteria for these pardons, announced by President José Antonio Kast for uniformed officers convicted in the 2019 social unrest. Subsecretary Pablo Mira also confirmed the continuity of the National Search Plan.

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.

Imeripotiwa na AI

The Chilean government met on Tuesday to address recent school violence and announced it will introduce one or two bills on Monday or Tuesday next, when Congress resumes. Ministers José García Ruminot, Trinidad Steinert, and María Paz Arzola took part in the meeting, focusing on incidents like a fatal attack on an inspector and molotov cocktails in a school.

 

 

 

Tovuti hii inatumia vidakuzi

Tunatumia vidakuzi kwa uchambuzi ili kuboresha tovuti yetu. Soma sera ya faragha yetu kwa maelezo zaidi.
Kataa