Sebastián Piñera, a conservative billionaire, assumed the presidency of Chile for the second time on March 11 after an election in which abstention was the biggest winner. In only a few weeks he and right-wing allies engineered changes to key reforms enacted by previous socialist president Michelle Bachelet (2014-2018), using technicalities and administrative channels rather than engaging Congress, which includes a range of left and center-left forces. These changes signified setbacks to progressive reforms made after years of democratic discussion and debate. As in other Latin American countries in recent years, Chile’s new government represented a swing to the right. In the region, democratic institutions are being bypassed and right-wing politicians, wealthy elites, and security forces are working to impose their interests via decrees, unelected institutions, and other undemocratic means, including violencewitness the assassination of councilwoman and activist Marielle Franco in Brazil and the shots fired against a bus caravan carrying Lula, former leftist president of Brazil, both in March.
After the transitions from military to civilian rule in Latin America in the 1980s and ’90s some scholars noted that military dictatorships had implanted structures that could later limit the future transition to full democracy, a phenomenon I have termed “guardian democracy.” Struggles to democratize political systems were constrained and sometimes halted by guardian structures that limited and controlled social mobilization, political opposition, and civilian power. In Chile, Augusto Pinochet established a Constitution in 1980 that enshrined a permanent political role for the armed forces. He stacked the Supreme Court with pro-military figures, named a number of “designated senators,” and set up a National Security Council (Cosena) to monitor the civilian government and override its decisions if the military deemed it necessary. Political personnel from the dictatorships, their civilian collaborators, and security forces remained a powerful presence in state and society after the transitions. In countries such as Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Uruguay, limited forms of democracy emerged alongside neoliberal economic systems.
After the 1990 transition in Chile, the most egregious guardian structures were gradually eliminated, especially in 2005. But some have never been completely removed. Pinochet’s Constitution is still in effect, with some revisions. Some