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Chilean general election, 1989

Chilean presidential election, 1989
Chile
← 1970 December 14, 1989 1993 →
  Patricio Aylwin (1990) - 2.jpg Hernán Büchi.jpg Francisco Javier Errázuriz Talavera (Recorte).jpg
Nominee Patricio Aylwin Hernán Büchi Francisco Javier Errázuriz Talavera
Party Christian Democratic Independent Independent
Alliance Concertación / UD DP / DR LSC / PN / AN / SUR
Popular vote 3,850,571 2,052,116 1,077,172
Percentage 55.17% 29.40% 15.43%

President before election

Augusto Pinochet
Military

Elected President

Patricio Aylwin
Christian Democratic


Augusto Pinochet
Military

Patricio Aylwin
Christian Democratic

General elections were held in Chile on 14 December 1989, bringing to an end the military regime that had been in place since 1973. Patricio Aylwin of the Coalition of Parties for Democracy alliance was elected President, whilst the alliance also won a majority of seats in the Chamber of Deputies and in the elected Senate seats.

From the 1989 elections onwards the military had officially left the political future of the country to civilians to be elected. Pinochet did not endorse any candidate publicly. Former dictatorship minister Hernán Büchi ran for president as candidate of the two right-wing parties RN and UDI. He had little political experience and was a relatively young (40 years) technocrat credited for Chile's good economic performance in the later half of the 1980s. The right parties faced several problems in the elections: there was considerable infighting between RN and UDI, Büchi had only very reluctantly accepted to run for president and right-wing politicians struggled to define their position towards the Pinochet regime. In addition to this right-wing populist Francisco Javier Errázuriz Talavera ran independently for president and made several election promises Büchi could not match.

The centre-left coalition Concertación was rather united and confident. Its candidate Patricio Aylwin, a Christian Democrat, behaved as if he had won and refused a second television debate with Büchi. Büchi attacked Aylwin on a remark he had made concerning that inflation rate of 20% was not much and he also accused Aylwin of making secret agreements with the Communist Party of Chile, a party that was not part of Concertación. Aylwin spoke with strength about the need to clarify human rights violations but did not confront the dictatorship for it, in contrast Büchi as a regime collaborator lacked any credibility when dealing with human right violations.


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