Chile's Former Leader Poised To Regain The Presidency
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It will be former President Michelle Bachelet against former Economy Minister Pablo Longueira in Chile's November's presidential election.
Chileans chose the candidates on Sunday in the country's first-ever presidential primary.
Bachelet won 73 percent of the votes and will lead the center-left New Majority coalition. She is the daughter of a general tortured to death for opposing dictator Gen. Augusto Pinochet's 1973 military coup. Bachelet herself was arrested along with her mother.
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Longueira, who was close to Pinochet, won 51 percent of the vote to lead the center-right Alliance for Chile bloc.
Bachelet, 61, spent the past two years heading the U.N. agency for women after ending her 2006-2010 presidency with high popularity ratings. She is the frontrunner in the Nov. 17 presidential election and vows to use a second term to fight Chile's income inequality, change the Pinochet-era constitution and reform taxes and education.
"Today's triumph is not the victory of one person, but of millions of Chileans," Bachelet said in a speech after the results were announced. "It's a project where the voices of citizens are vital. It's the triumph of the demand for education that is free, dignified and of quality for every child."
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Longueira, 55, is a civil engineer and one of the founding members of the conservative Independent Democratic Union that supported Pinochet's dictatorship. He entered the presidential race two months ago when Laurence Golborne, a charismatic businessman seen as the center-right's best hope for holding onto power, was forced out by a financial scandal.
"If in just two months we won the primaries, in five months, we'll win the presidential elections," Longueira said.
He seeks to follow in President Sebastian Pinera's footsteps.
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Pinera, a billionaire and former airline magnate, has overseen a period high economic growth with low unemployment and inflation rates. But he has been troubled by widespread protests.
Chile, the world's largest copper producer, is respected for its fast-growing economy and stable institutions. But it also has the worst inequality rate among the 34 countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development.
The next president will have to tackle growing social demands and protests demanding a better distribution of Chile's copper wealth, the preservation of the environment and free education.
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Based on reporting by The Associated Press.
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