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Reuters
Reuters
Politics
Natalia A. Ramos Miranda and Fabian Cambero

Chile election poll shows race tightening as polarized showdown nears

FILE PHOTO: Chilean presidential candidate Gabriel Boric, of left-wing coalition 'Apruebo Dignidad' (I Approve Dignity), takes part in a live radio debate ahead of December 19 second round presidential elections in Santiago, Chile, December 10, 2021. REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado

Chile's presidential election race is tightening ahead of a polarized runoff on Sunday, with ultra-conservative Jose Antonio Kast narrowing the gap to leftist former student leader Gabriel Boric as the two compete for key middle ground votes.

A private survey from pollster Cadem, seen by Reuters, showed Kast with 36% of the voting intention, just 3-points behind Boric, half the gap there had been at the end of last month shortly after the Nov. 21 first round vote.

FILE PHOTO: Chilean presidential candidate Jose Antonio Kast from the far-right Republican Party, takes part in a live radio debate ahead of December 19 second round presidential elections in Santiago, Chile, December 10, 2021. REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado

That would translate into a 52%-48% win for Boric once non-valid votes were removed, compared with a 54%-46% victory in the same poll on Nov. 26. The poll of 1,000 people from Dec. 9-10 had a margin of error of 3.1 percentage points, it said.

The narrower gap sets the scene for a knife-edge run-off vote, the first presidential decider since Chile was rocked by widespread protests two years ago that saw months of marches as well as street violence in protest against inequality.

"It is a very uncertain election in a very abnormal year, it has been two very abnormal years from the social upheaval onwards, nothing has been predictable," said Kenneth Bunker, director of consultancy Tresquintos.

FILE PHOTO: Chilean presidential candidate Gabriel Boric, of left-wing coalition 'Apruebo Dignidad' (I Approve Dignity), talks to the media after a live radio debate ahead of December 19 second round presidential elections in Santiago, Chile, December 10, 2021. REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado/File Photo

Bunker said that Boric held a slight advantage and that the biggest shock would be a Kast victory, but that polarization in the country and voluntary voting made the outcome difficult to predict. He expected relatively weak voter turnout.

"Everything is possible," he said.

The vote has divided Chileans between a revitalized progressive left, which has gained strongly since widespread social protests in 2019, and a counter movement on the far right that has rallied around Kast's tough law and order message.

FILE PHOTO: Chilean presidential candidate Jose Antonio Kast from the far-right Republican Party, looks on after a live radio debate ahead of December 19 second round presidential elections in Santiago, Chile, December 10, 2021. REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado/File Photo

Boric and Kast offer wildly different visions for the future of the Andean nation, the world's top producer of copper and long seen as a bastion of stability in the region that is plagued by political upheaval and economic volatility.

The Cadem poll showed that a quarter of people were still undecided or did not plan to vote. It also showed Kast attracting more moderate voters than before from defeated first-round conservative Sebastián Sichel.

A second poll, from La Cosa Nostra which surveyed 600 people between Nov. 27 and Dec. 7, showed that Boric remained ahead with 52.5% of the voting preference versus 47.5% for Kast, when only valid votes were taken into account.

The pollster's previous survey was carried out in early November well before the first round vote, which had showed the two candidates neck-and-neck in a hypothetical second round.

The country is in a two-week blackout period where pollsters cannot publicly publish surveys on the vote, but private polls are often commissioned.

Race tightens

Race tightens (Interactive version)

Mind the Gap

Mind the Gap (Interactive version)

(Reporting by Natalia Ramos and Fabian Cambero; Editing by Adam Jourdan and Richard Pullin)

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