Far-right Candidate Jose Antonio Kast Wins Chile’s Presidential Election

Written on 12/14/2025
Josep Freixes

Far-right candidate Jose Antonio Kast defeats leftist Jara in the second round of elections and will be Chile’s next president. Credit: Oscar Maltez, CC BY 2.0 / Flickr / Kast Team, CC BY 4.0 / Wikimedia.

In the runoff of the presidential election, far-right candidate José Antonio Kast prevailed by a wide margin over his rival, consolidating a victory that reshapes the country’s political map and marks the end of a cycle that began with Gabriel Boric’s arrival at La Moneda. Kast won 58,1% of the vote, compared with just 41,3% for the communist Jeanette Jara.

The result confirms a shift in the electorate toward more conservative positions, driven by a combination of social discontent, fear, and dissatisfaction with the outgoing administration’s performance.

Election day proceeded smoothly and with strong turnout—bearing in mind that voting was compulsory—and stood as a clear reflection of the polarization that defined the campaign. Kast capitalized on a climate of weariness over persistent problems and unfulfilled promises, while his message of order, security, and state control resonated with broad urban sectors and regions hit by violence and economic uncertainty.

Although Kast secured the backing of the other right-wing forces that ran in the first round, both libertarians and the traditional right, the scale of the victory was surprising not only because of the vote gap, but also because of how quickly doubts faded about the candidate’s ability to broaden his electoral base.

Far-right candidate Jose Antonio Kast wins Chile’s Presidential Election

The outcome of the runoff sends a clear message from the ballot box: a majority of the country opted for a drastic change in political direction. After years of constitutional debates, social protests, and partial reforms, voters appeared to prioritize immediate certainty over long-term transformations. The promise of stability, fiscal discipline, and a tougher security policy prevailed over calls to deepen the social agenda launched in 2022.

This shift cannot be understood solely as ideological backing for the far right. It also reflects a protest vote against the Boric administration, perceived by many as unable to respond effectively to everyday urgencies. Kast’s victory draws both on committed supporters and on pragmatic backing from voters who, without fully sharing his worldview, chose an alternative that offered concrete and rapid responses.

Kast’s victory opens a stage full of uncertainties. In his victory speech, the president-elect called for unity and promised to govern for all Chileans, aware of the distrust his figure generates in broad sectors. However, his room for maneuver will depend on his ability to translate campaign promises into effective public policies without deepening social divisions.

On the institutional front, the new government will have to contend with a fragmented Congress and a demanding citizenry. Initial international reactions were cautious, while markets responded with moderate optimism amid expectations of greater economic discipline. In the streets, by contrast, celebrations mixed with expressions of concern from those who fear setbacks in rights and freedoms.

The defeated candidate, Jeannette Jara, called her rival to congratulate him on his victory, thus acknowledging the clear results from the moment the vote count began. “Democracy spoke loud and clear. I have just spoken with president-elect José Antonio Kast to wish him success for the good of Chile,” the center-left contender said in a message on X.

Insecurity, immigration and the wear of the Boric government

One of the decisive axes of the campaign was the growing sense of insecurity. The rise in violent crime, the prominence of organized crime, and the perception of a loss of control in some territories made the issue the main public concern. Kast built his message around a promise of a hard line, strengthening the security forces and offering unrestricted backing to Carabineros—a message that resonated in working-class neighborhoods and among the middle classes.

Irregular immigration was another central factor. In the north of the country, where migratory pressure is felt most intensely, discontent translated into strong support for proposals on border control and faster expulsions. The association between immigration and crime, though controversial, proved electorally effective and allowed Kast to present himself as the only candidate willing to confront the problem without ambiguity.

Added to these elements were the shortcomings and missteps of Gabriel Boric’s government. Flagship reforms that failed to advance, difficulties in forging majorities in Congress, and a management style perceived as erratic eroded initial confidence. The contrast between the expectations generated in 2022 and the concrete results of the outgoing administration ultimately tipped the balance in favor of a radically opposite option.

Growing insecurity and immigration—as in other countries in the region—dominated the political debate leading up to the presidential elections in Chile. Credit: Carlos Figueroa Rojas, CC BY-SA 4.0 / Wikimedia.

Related: Gabriel Boric, the Victory of the Pinochetist Far Right in Chile, and Donald Trump.

Jose Antonio Kast, the son of a German Nazi who collaborated with Pinochet

José Antonio Kast, a lawyer by training and a central figure of Chile’s hard right, reaches the presidency after a trajectory marked by ideological coherence and political perseverance.

Born in Santiago in 1966, he comes from a family of German origin—his father was a member of Nazism and later collaborated with Pinochet’s dictatorship in Chile—and became involved in politics at a young age through the Independent Democratic Union, the party with which he served as a lawmaker for four consecutive terms. His break with the UDI and the subsequent founding of the Republican Party consolidated his profile as an uncompromising conservative leader.

Kast has built his career on a discourse of traditional values, defense of order, and frontal criticism of the left. An admirer of the liberal economic model, he has been a staunch opponent of expansive tax reforms and of profound changes to the role of the state. At the same time, his stance on human rights and historical memory has generated controversy, especially because of his critical view of the legacy of the dictatorship, in which his father openly collaborated.

On a personal level, he presents himself as the father of a large family and a practicing Catholic, traits he has incorporated into his public narrative as symbols of coherence and closeness to a conservative electorate. After losing previous elections, he knew how to read the social climate and adjust his strategy without renouncing his principles, expanding his base beyond the hard core. His arrival at La Moneda represents not only an electoral victory, but the consolidation of a radical right that has moved from the margins to the center of Chilean political power.

With today’s result, the map of Latin American geopolitics now includes one more country under the control of a far-right government, aligned without concessions with the United States. Kast’s will be the most right-wing government in Chile since the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet, a regime that ended 35 years ago.

Jose Antonio Kast’s government will be the most right-wing since the end of Augusto Pinochet’s dictatorship in 1990. Credit: Chile Congress Library, CC BY-SA 3.0 Cl / Wikimedia.

Related: Colombia Divided Over Far-Right Victory of Kast in Chile.