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Reuters
Reuters
Environment
Fabian Cambero, Anthony Esposito and Natalia A. Ramos Miranda

Chile's left cheers as Boric win ripples through Latin America

Chile's President-elect Gabriel Boric gestures as he celebrates with supporters after winning the presidential election in Santiago, Chile, December 19, 2021. REUTERS/Rodrigo Garrido

Chile's left partied into the early hours of Monday with thousands taking to the street with flags and banners in capital Santiago to celebrate the election win of 35-year-old Gabriel Boric, who will become the country's youngest ever President.

Boric, a former student protest leader who leads a leftist coalition and has pledged to overhaul Chile's economic model, firmly beat out far-right rival Jose Antonio Kast, who quickly conceded defeat, helping give certainty to the result.

A supporter of Chilean presidential candidate Gabriel Boric celebrates after the presidential election, in Concepcion, Chile, December 19, 2021. REUTERS/Juan Gonzalez

The win marked another advance for Latin America's left, and bolstered talk of a new 'pink tide' in the region, as raging poverty fanned by the coronavirus pandemic sways voters towards those who promise bigger government and higher social spending.

"I'm very excited because this is an achievement of the people. There have been many years of abuse, and we need a renovation within politics," said Boric supporter Patricia Garrido amid crowds celebrating on the streets of the capital.

"I have a lot of faith and hope in the youth."

Supporters of Chilean presidential candidate Gabriel Boric celebrate after the presidential election, in Concepcion, Chile, December 19, 2021. REUTERS/Juan Gonzalez

Boric's rise - and the wider polarization of the vote - had rattled Chile's markets and spooked mining firms concerned by his rhetoric to "bury" the country's market-orientated economic model, push higher taxes and tighten environmental regulation.

In his victory speech on Sunday, he touched upon indigenous rights, gender equality and the environment, though he also talked about fiscal responsibility and said he would look after the economy. He did though take aim at mining projects that hurt the environment.

"We have an enormous challenge. I know that in the coming years, the future of our country is at stake, so I guarantee that I will be a president who cares for democracy and does not risk it," he said.

A supporter of Chilean presidential candidate Gabriel Boric carries a Chilean flag as supporters celebrate after their candidate won the presidential election, in Santiago, Chile, December 19, 2021. REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado

"I will firmly fight against the privileges of the few, and I will work every day for the quality of the Chilean family."

Leftist leaders around the region cheered his win: Alberto Fernandez in Argentina, Luis Arce in Bolivia, Brazilian former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, and Pedro Castillo - another outsider leftist who became Peru's President in July.

"It's spectacular. At one point, we thought it was going to be closer. Luckily fascism didn't win from the current far-right," said Andres Rodriguez, another Boric supporter.

A supporter of Chilean presidential candidate Gabriel Boric is pictured after the presidential election, in Concepcion, Chile, December 19, 2021. REUTERS/Juan Gonzalez

"There is a big project behind what we are proposing: we want to unify the system and equalize things a bit."

Despite a campaign that at times turned heated between the two polar opposite candidates, Kast quickly recognized the win, congratulating Boric and calling for the result to be respected, important as the country tries to heal and unify.

"I'm super excited," said Cristian Aburto, a Boric supporter who was working in a polling station.

"I think the most important thing is seeing the people here together. We all want people to be united."

Chile election: won and lost

Chile election: won and lost (Interactive graphic)

Boric vs Kast

Boric vs Kast (Interactive graphic)

(Reporting by Fabian Cambero, Anthony Esposito, Natalia Ramos and Esteban Medel; Writing by Adam Jourdan; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)

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