Vodanovic criticizes Steinert's security management and megareform

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.

Paulina Vodanovic, president of the Socialist Party, criticized Security Minister Trinidad Steinert's management in an interview on Canal 13's Mesa Central. "The minister must fulfill the duty the law imposes on her, which is to have a national strategy to combat terrorism and crime," Vodanovic stated, insisting that ministers must build public policies and direct the national security strategy.

Vodanovic pointed to delays in team unity and lack of results in migration. "19 seremis have left the government, zero immigrants expelled," she said. She also questioned the economic megareform: "The project is based on erroneous assumptions" and aims to "collect less," warning that it cuts taxes for large companies without clear compensations.

In response, UDI president Guillermo Ramírez backed Steinert in talks with La Tercera and Mesa Central. "What Minister Steinert says seems reasonable to me," he said, adding there is no "silver bullet" in security and 100 measures are needed. "She will be judged by her ability to make Chile a safer country," Ramírez stated.

Steinert had acknowledged criticisms of her management 50 days into the government. "Let us work, we are doing it, but results cannot be immediate," she told La Tercera. Ramírez also defended the government against Hacienda leaks on budget cuts, accusing the left of irresponsibility.

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Chilean politician Guillermo Ramírez announcing security plan at press conference with Minister Steinert and June 1 roadmap on screen.
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Government to present security plan on June 1, says UDI president

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UDI president Guillermo Ramírez defended Minister Trinidad Steinert and announced that the government will unveil a roadmap with concrete measures during the public account on June 1.

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.

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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.

Security Minister Trinidad Steinert hit back at Instituto Nacional de Derechos Humanos (INDH) Director Yerko Ljubetic's criticisms of the Nain-Retamal law, calling it an attack on his mandate. Steinert accused Ljubetic of using an 'inverted logic' and defended the law as a key advance against criminal impunity. The dispute arose during the INDH's 2025 public accountability event.

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Opposition lawmakers decided to drop the interpellation of the security minister after Tuesday's cabinet reshuffle. The move aims to give new holder Martín Arrau time to settle in.

Fifteen regional ministerial secretaries have left their posts just over a month after President José Antonio Kast took office at La Moneda. Spokesperson Minister Mara Sedini attributed the exits to thorough background checks uncovering unforeseen issues. The latest case involved actor Renato Münster, who resigned for personal reasons.

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PDI Director General Eduardo Cerna testified on Monday before the Chamber of Deputies' Security Commission that he decided the retirement of Prefect General Consuelo Peña, subdirector of Intelligence, Organized Crime and Migration Security. He reaffirmed it was an institutional decision per current regulations. Ruling party lawmakers praised the presentation and called to end the generated controversy.

 

 

 

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