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Chile’s new president has praised Pinochet, a dictator. What does it mean? 

11 March 2026
This content originally appeared on Al Jazeera.
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It was a symbol hiding in plain sight. On February 24, two weeks before his inauguration as Chile’s president, Jose Antonio Kast unveiled his official portrait.

The photo showed the 60-year-old leader wearing a blue suit, the presidential sash and a conspicuous coat of arms stitched in the middle.

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It was conspicuous, because no president since the fall of Augusto Pinochet in 1990 had posed with the coat of arms on the sash. The last leader to do so was Pinochet himself.

For critics, the crest was another expression of Kast’s professed affinity for the former hardline leader.

But as Kast is sworn into office on Wednesday, analysts question whether his embrace of Pinochet is nostalgia for Latin America’s past dictatorships — or whether it is simply a sign of frustration with the status quo.

Maria Fernanda Garcia, the director of Chile’s Museum of Memory and Human Rights, noted that, around the world, there appears to be a shift towards more hardline policies.

She credits a “crisis of democracy” with helping to “turn a past that was full of horror in many parts of the world into something that is glorified by people who didn’t live through it.”

“It’s not what we expected after the learnings of the second world war and other conflicts and dictatorships,” Garcia added.

Still, she has observed that young people in particular are falling prey, influenced by reactionary narratives on social media.

“Rebellion these days is not against war or dictatorships, but the rebellion is against that which is established,” Garcia said. “And the established is democracy, respect for human rights.”

Who was Pinochet?

Kast won December’s presidential election with the largest vote tally in Chilean history. More than seven million Chileans cast a ballot for him in the run-off, earning him more than 58 percent of the vote.

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His success came in spite of critics pointing to past statements where he showed reverence for Pinochet.

Kast had even speculated during a past race that, if Pinochet had been alive, “he would have voted for me.”

Pinochet seized power in a 1973 military coup, ousting Chile’s democratically elected leader.

Over the next 17 years, he carried out a campaign of systemic repression against his political opponents, resulting in the death of more than 3,000 people. Thousands more were imprisoned and tortured.

Kast was a young man at the time of the dictatorship. But even then, he participated in a youth campaign to keep Pinochet in power.

While Kast downplayed those ties during his most recent presidential race, the connection to Pinochet has been part of his personal brand for most of his political career.

Felipe Gonzalez Mac-Conell, author of the book Kast: The Chilean Far-Right, explained that the influence of Pinochet’s government can be linked to Kast’s embrace of neoliberal economics and his conservative approach to issues like crime and women’s rights.

“What has permeated his entire political project has been a vindication of the cultural values of the dictatorship, the economic policies of the dictatorship, and also of various civic collaborators of the dictatorship,” Mac-Conell said.

Pinochet’s associates have even formed a cornerstone of Kast’s incoming government.

Before his inauguration, Kast named two former lawyers for Pinochet, Fernando Barros and Fernando Rabat, to his cabinet.

They will serve as minister of defence and minister of justice and human rights, respectively.

SANTIAGO, CHILE - DECEMBER 14: Supporters of Presidential candidate Jose Antonio Kast of the "Partido Republicano" celebrate with an image of former Chilean President Augusto Pinochet followingg the 2025 presidential election on December 14, 2025 in Santiago, Chile. According to the Chilean electoral institute 'Servel', Kast has 58.21% of the votes against 41.79% for Jeannette Jara of the "Unidad Por Chile" Coalition, after 98.53% of the polling stations counted in the Presidential election runoff.(Photo by Claudio Santana/Getty Images)
Supporters of presidential candidate Jose Antonio Kast celebrate with an image of former Chilean leader Augusto Pinochet following the run-off race on December 14, 2025 [Claudio Santana/Getty Images]

The legacy of Chile’s coup, however, remains a divisive subject in the country, and experts warn it is difficult to know how many Chileans currently support the late Pinochet’s platform.

One poll in 2023, from the marketing research group Mori Chile, found that more than a third of Chileans believe the 1973 coup was justified.

Pinochet has remained a dominant figure in Chilean politics — and not just because of Kast.

During the 2025 presidential campaign, for instance, another far-right candidate, Johannes Kaiser, also expressed his support for the coup. He ultimately earned 14 percent of the vote in the first round of the election.

But support for the legacy of dictatorship is not necessarily what drove voters to Kast, according to Mac-Conell.

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Instead, Mac-Conell believes Kast came to power as the result of various factors, including the shortcomings of Chile’s left wing — and frustration with his predecessor, outgoing President Gabriel Boric.

Mac-Conell also pointed out that Kast formed his own party as an alternative to the status quo. Kast’s Republican Party is seen as more conservative than the right-wing establishment.

Chile’s new President Jose Antonio Kast (R), wearing the presidential sash, and Chile’s outgoing President Gabriel Boric clap at the National Congress in Valparaiso, Chile, on March 11, 2026.
Chile’s new president, Jose Antonio Kast, stands next to his predecessor, Gabriel Bori,c at a ceremony in the National Congress in Valparaiso, Chile, on March 11 [AFP]

A regional trend?

Jose Alejandro Godoy, a Peruvian political scientist who is writing a book about autocracy in Latin America, has been exploring how Kast may be part of a broader trend in the region’s politics.

Other prominent Latin American leaders have similarly embraced the dictatorships in their countries’ pasts.

In Brazil, for instance, former President Jair Bolsonaro openly venerated his country’s military dictatorship. He has since been convicted of trying to overthrow the democratic rule of law himself.

In Argentina, meanwhile, President Javier Milei has minimised the atrocities that killed or disappeared an estimated 30,000 people in the 1970s and ’80s.

Godoy argues that the rise of these leaders is not an expression of “nostalgia for an earlier model or era” but instead a reflection of deep disaffection with present-day politics.

“People don’t think politics is going to change anything in their life in the near or medium term,” Godoy said.

Amid that yawning apathy and mistrust, “we’re finding characters who are closer to an authoritarian vision,” he explained.

Godoy pointed to the political situation in his own country, Peru, which is set to hold a new presidential election in April.

One of the frontrunners is Keiko Fujimori, the daughter of the late Alberto Fujimori, a divisive leader widely condemned as a dictator. Her campaign slogans reflect her father’s appeal for Peruvian strength and stability.

“Let’s bring order to Peru,” one slogan says. Another is simply, “The force of order.”

The late Fujimori was ultimately convicted of human rights abuses in 2009, including for his use of death squads.

Still, Godoy said there has always been a sector of Peruvian society that minimised the human rights violations in favour of social and economic goals.

In Chile, he added, it’s similar: Kast’s appeal is not so much a nostalgia for Pinochet but rather a thirst for order, something Kast harnessed with his aggressive public safety platform and proposed crackdown on immigration.

“The worry is,” Godoy said, “you trade security for civil liberties.”