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The Rise of Alternative Presidential Candidates in Chile, 2009-2017
Author(s) -
Patricio Navia,
Lucas Perelló
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
revista latinoamericana de opinión pública
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2660-700X
pISSN - 1852-9003
DOI - 10.14201/rlop.23628
Subject(s) - presidential system , popularity , ideology , politics , probit model , political economy , political science , pessimism , voting , presidential election , scale (ratio) , development economics , demographic economics , economics , geography , law , cartography , philosophy , epistemology , econometrics
This article explores the growing popularity of alternative presidential candidates — those from outside the two dominant coalitions — in Chile from 2009 to 2017. Following a theoretical discussion that focuses on the causes of voter discontent with the political establishment, we formulate four hypotheses. We view support for alternative presidential candidates as a function of ideological detachment, declining political engagement, the economic vote, and socio-demographic shifts in the electorate. We use three pre-electoral Centro de Estudios Públicos surveys to present probit models and predicted probabilities. Our findings suggest that a distinct segment of Chilean voters is behind the rise of alternative presidential candidates. Younger and more educated voters who identify less with the traditional left-right ideological scale and political parties and suffer from economic anxiety—viewing the economy as performing well nationally while remaining pessimistic about their financial prospects—comprise this subgroup.

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