Utah

Chileans vote in Sandy as Chile’s proposed new constitution goes down in defeat

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SANDY — Patricia North, originally from Santiago, Chile, but now living in Vineyard, is a long way away from the South American nation.

But she still cares about what happens there, and on Sunday she was one of perhaps hundreds from around Utah who cast a ballot in the nation’s plebiscite on a proposed new Chilean constitution. “My family’s still there. I want them to be safe,” she said after casting her vote at the balloting site set up in Sandy for Chilean expatriates.

Chile’s constitution, drawn up in 1980 during the regime of former dictator Augusto Pinochet, has been the focus of intense debate dating to national protests in 2019 focused on a range of social issues. Chileans last year overwhelming rejected a proposed new constitution perceived as left-leaning that emerged from the debate. The new proposal, drawn up by a group of right-leaning officials, was similarly headed toward defeat as of late Sunday afternoon, the Associated Press and other media outlets reported.

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Whatever the case, Sunday’s voting in Sandy drew a passionate contingent of Chilean expatriates in Utah. The Chilean Consulate of Los Angeles, California, which covers Utah, Colorado, Southern California and other parts of the Southwestern United States, set up the site, one of many remote balloting places across the United States and around the world.

A collection box for ballots cast Sunday on the proposed new Chilean constitution by expatriate Chileans at a polling site in Sandy. Expatriate Chileans voted at remote sites around the world. (Photo: Tim Vandenack, KSL.com)

Kathleen Frez, now living in Lehi but originally from Santiago, was among the voters in Sandy, like North. She called it a civic duty to vote, even if she is so far from Chile. “We all want the best for our country,” Frez said.

Some 15 million Chileans in all went to the polls on Sunday, including expatriates in Utah and the rest of the world. Since 2017, Chileans living abroad have had the right to vote remotely in presidential elections and national referendums, according to Francisco Leal, consul general of the Chilean Consulate in Los Angeles, California, which covers Utah. Some 1,300 Chileans now living in Utah and Colorado were properly registered to vote on Sunday, he said, and they formed a steady stream at the polling place in Sandy.

Fernando Maluenda and his wife Priscila Maluenda, now living in South Jordan, took part. “We still feel Chilean,” Priscila Maluenda said.

Maybe their votes won’t sway things, Fernando Maluenda added, but still, he wanted to have his say. “You always have the hope that Chile will have a better future,” he said.

Several departing the Sandy voting place inside the Best Western Plus Cottontree Inn expressed support for the proposed new constitution.

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North worries the nation has been on a downward spiral with increasing crime and more and more undocumented immigrants entering the nation from Venezuela and Colombia. She saw the proposed new constitution as a way to help counter those trends.

“I want my country to keep going, even if I stay here,” she said.

Patricia North, originally from Santiago, Chile, but now living in Vineyard, discusses the vote on the proposed new Chilean constitution after casting a ballot at a remote voting site in Sandy for expatriates. Sandy was one of many sites around the world for expatriates to vote on the proposal Sunday. (Photo: Tim Vandenack, KSL.com)

After so much protesting and instability in Chile in recent years, Karoll Adonis, originally from Santiago and now living in Provo, similarly viewed the proposed constitution as a way of bringing stability back to the country. “Now with everything that’s happening, I think we’re going backward,” she said.

Camila Gonzalez, now living in Midvale but originally from the northern Chilean city of Antofagasta, voted against the proposed constitution. It doesn’t do enough to protect the environment, a big concern for her, she said, and she also worries it chips away at abortion rights in the nation, already limited. What’s more, she doesn’t think the public had enough say in putting the proposal together.

Camila Gonzalez, originally from Antofagasta, Chile, and now living in Midvale, casts a ballot Sunday on the proposed new Chilean constitution at a polling place for expatriates in Sandy. The Chilean government opened remote voting sites all around the world for expatriates. (Photo: Tim Vandenack, KSL.com)

Mulling the prospect of defeat, however, Gonzalez wouldn’t favor moves to put a third proposal to the public anytime soon. “I think we’re tired of voting so much. We’ve gone through a lot of votes in so little time,” she said.

Sandy was one of 10 U.S. cities where expatriate Chileans could vote and among many more locations all around the world. More than 127,000 Chileans in all outside the South American nation were eligible to vote, including just over 20,000 in the United States, according to the Chilean Electoral Service.

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Tim Vandenack covers immigration, multicultural issues and Northern Utah for KSL.com. He worked several years for the Standard-Examiner in Ogden and has lived and reported in Mexico, Chile and along the U.S.-Mexico border.

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