Chilean parliamentary election, 2009
|
|
|
All of the 120 seats in the Chamber of Deputies 18 out of 38 seats in the Senate 61 deputies and 20 senators seats needed for a majority |
Turnout |
87.70% |
|
First party |
Second party |
|
|
|
|
|
Party |
Concert & Together We Can |
Coalition for Change |
|
Last election |
65 D & 20 S, 51.76% |
54 D & 17 S, 38.72% |
|
Seats won |
57 D & 19 S |
58 D & 16 S |
|
Seat change |
8 D & 1 S |
4 D & 1 S |
|
Popular vote |
2,934,378 |
2,874,674 |
|
Percentage |
44.35% |
43.45% |
|
Swing |
7.41 pp |
4.38 pp |
|
|
Parliamentary elections were held in Chile on December 13, 2009, in conjunction with the presidential election.[1] The totality of seats in the Chamber of Deputies and 18 out of 38 seats in the Senate were up for election.
The centre-right Coalition for Change improved on the Alliance for Chile's result in 2005 by winning 58 seats in the Chamber of Deputies, while the governing center-left Concert of Parties for Democracy (CPD) was reduced to 57 seats. The election was notable because the Communist Party, debuting in coalition with the CPD, won seats in the lower chamber for the first time since 1973.
Even though neither coalition secured an absolute majority in either chamber, center-left forces continued to hold more than half of seats in the bicameral congress.
Legislation
According to the Chilean Constitution, the citizens could exercise the right to suffrage, or, those who have expired 18 years of age and have not been condemned to a sorrow superior to 3 years of prison (a distressing sorrow). To take part in the elections it was needed to be before inscribed in the electoral records and to present the bond of identity. The requirements to register were a 18-year-old major being in the day of the election and to have Chilean nationality or to be a resident foreigner for more than five years in the country (that one credits with a certificate expressed by the respective provincial governor). The right to vote was remaining suspended by interdiction in case of dementia, for being accused by crime that deserves a distressing sorrow or for crime for terrorism and for sanction of the Constitutional Court (in conformity to the article 19 n. º 15 clause 7. º of the Constitution).
In agreement to the legislation of the epoch, the process of inscription in the electoral records was voluntary, but after having registered, the elector was forced to support to perpetuity and only it could apologize for reasons of health or for being located to more than 300 kilometres of distance of the place of voting, fact of the one that can leave witness him in the Carabineers' most nearby unit of Chile. In case of not helping or not to take up office as member of table, the electors could be condemned to the payment of fines. Though on March 27, 2009 there was promulgated by the chairwoman Michelle Bachelet the law that establishes the automatic inscription of the voters and that allows the voluntary voting of these, 4 the entry in force of the above mentioned regulation was not applicable in these elections due to the lack of the law that was regulating sayings procesos.5 The election with voluntary vote materialized in the municipal elections of 2012.
Candidates
Concert & Together We Can fore more democracy
Arrate & Frei in 2009.
The A list conformed after the union of two political coalitions that had taken part separately in the elections of 2005. On one hand the Concert of parties for democracy, which was grouping to the center-left parties that since 1990 governed the country. In the other hand the left-wing Together We Can More, that it suffered an internal division after the exit of the Humanist Party.
The reason of this strange union was, the Binomial System that get out the political left from the National Congress since 1994.
The largest party inside the A list was the Christian Democrats, with the leadership of Juan Carlos Latorre who was chief of the Eduardo Frei's presidential campaign. The Socialists joined with the senator Camilo Escalona, PPD with the deputy Pepe Auth. The Radicals led by Senator Gómez, and the Communist Party with the leadership of Guillermo Teillier.
Coalition for Change
Presentation of the Coalition for the Change. Fernando Flores speaks.
The Alliance for Chile for the elections of 2009, began with an important step, by means of I arrive of two precandidates, one of them the senator Pablo Longueira, and the mayor of Concepción, Jacqueline van Rysselberghe, both of the Independent Democratic Union, who demonstrated his availability of postulating to this post, using the regular conduits inside the coalition, nevertheless, both rejected such an option to present only a presidential candidate, who would be Sebastián Piñera.
In March, 2009, two Congressmen of the Alliance for Chile obtained the speaker of the Senate and the speaker of the Deputies' Chamber, by means of an agreement with the independent bench and with the Concert, respectively. The above mentioned agreements were not lacking in polemic, since the Senator who postulated the alliance to preside at the above mentioned organism, Jovino Novoa, was duramente criticized for personeros of the Concert in view of his past as member of Augusto Pinochet Ugarte's military regime.
In spite of the critiques, the Alliance for Chile awarded a political victory on having presided at both chambers of the National Congress and some of the most influential commissions of the same one, which, they waited in the conglomerate opponent, he was benefiting Sebastián Piñera's candidacy.
After having integrated the list Clean Chile, Vote Happy, one was generated fail between the charter members of ChileFirst with regard to the position that would take the party opposite to the presidential and parliamentary elections of 2009. Whereas Jorge Schaulsohn and Senator Flores supported the candidate of the Alliance for Chile Sebastián Piñera,[2] the deputy Esteban Valenzuela rejected to join with the center-right and resigned ChileFirst to endorse Marco Enríquez-Ominami's candidacy.[3] The support to Piñera on the part of ChileFirst was made official on May 6, 2009, when one presented the "Coalition for the Change", electoral agreement between the Alliance for Chile, ChileFirst and other political minor movements.
New Majority for Chile
New Majority for Chile was a political coalition that grouped the Ecologist party of Chile, the Humanist Party of Chile, and diverse political and independent movements that supported the candidacy of the independent Marco Enríquez-Ominami for the presidential election of 2009. Between the movements and groups without political legal constitution that they it shaped are the Regionalist Movement,[4] the Movement Unified of Sexual Minorities (MUMS),[5] the Movement SurDA and the Progressist Network.[6]
Slogans
Party |
Slogan |
Christian Democrat | With you, will live better. Live dreaming a new sun |
Radical Social Democrat | A change must be Radical |
Socialist | Socialist Heart |
PPD | Let's break the Ice |
Communist | ¡United we can! |
RN | With your vote today it's possible |
UDI | The motor of popular change. |
Regionalist | We are hope, We are future |
Humanist | We are the new majority |
Chilean Chamber of Deputies elections
↓
58 |
2 |
3 |
57 |
Coalition for Change |
Ind |
PRI |
Concert & Together We Can |
↓
37 |
18 |
3 |
2 |
3 |
19 |
18 |
11 |
5 |
3 |
1 |
UDI |
RN |
' |
Ind |
PRI |
PDC |
PPD |
PS |
PRSD |
PC |
' |
Official and final results.[7]
List |
Parties |
Candidates
|
Elected
|
Net Change in seats
|
% of Seats
|
% of Votes
|
Number of Votes
|
Change in % of vote
|
|
Concert & Together We Can for more democracy |
Total List A | 120 | 57 | -8 | 47.5 | 44.3 | 2,934,378 | +0.7% |
|
Christian Democratic |
39 | 19 | -1 | 15.8 | 14.2 | 940,265 | -6.5% |
|
PPD |
27 | 18 | -3 | 15.0 | 12.7 | 839,744 | -2.7% |
|
Socialist |
24 | 11 | -4 | 9.2 | 9.9 | 653,367 | -0.2% |
|
Social Democratic Radical |
14 | 5 | -2 | 4.2 | 3.8 | 251,456 | +0.3% |
|
Communist |
9 | 3 | +3 | 2.5 | 2.0 | 133,718 | -3.1% |
| List A Independents |
5 | 1 | -1 | 0.8 | 1.7 | 115,828 | -0.2% |
|
Coalition for Change |
Total List B | 120 | 58 | +4 | 48.3 | 43.4 | 2,874,674 | +4.4% |
|
UDI |
56 | 37 | +4 | 30.8 | 23.1 | 1,525,000 | +0.7% |
|
National Renewal |
51 | 18 | -1 | 15.0 | 17.8 | 1,178,392 | +3.7% |
|
ChileFirst |
4 | 0 | - | 0.0 | 0.2 | 18,021 | - |
| List B Independents |
9 | 3 | +1 | 2.5 | 2.3 | 153,261 | +1% |
|
Clean Chile, Vote Happy |
Total List D | 92 | 3 | - | 2.5 | 5.4 | 356,798 | - |
|
Regionalist |
63 | 3 | - | 2.5 | 4.0 | 264,466 | - |
|
MAS |
7 | 0 | - | 0.0 | 0.4 | 26,440 | - |
| List D Independents |
22 | 0 | - | 0.0 | 1.0 | 65,892 | - |
|
New Majority for Chile |
Total List C | 79 | 0 | - | 0.0 | 4.6 | 302,627 | - |
|
Humanist |
38 | 0 | - | 0.0 | 1.4 | 95,177 | -0.1% |
|
Ecologist |
2 | 0 | - | 0.0 | 0.1 | 3,815 | - |
| List C Independents |
39 | 0 | - | 0.0 | 3.1 | 206,635 | - |
E |
Independents out of pact |
18 | 2 | +2 | 1.67 | 2.2 | 147,379 | +1.3% |
Total | 429 | 120 | | 100.0 | 100.0 | 6,615,856 | |
List of elected deputies 2010-2014
District | Deputy | Party | Votes | % |
1[d] |
Orlando Vargas Pizarro |
Ind-PPD |
22 425 |
30,01 % |
Nino Baltolú Rasera |
UDI |
17 644 |
23,61 % |
2[d] |
Hugo Gutiérrez Gálvez |
PCCh |
28 217 |
30,31 % |
Marta Isasi Barbieri |
Ind-UDI |
28 884 |
31,02 % |
3[d] |
Felipe Ward Edwards |
UDI |
24 618 |
37,36 % |
Marcos Espinoza Monardes |
PRSD |
16 223 |
24,62 % |
4[d] |
Pedro Araya Guerrero |
PRI |
27 268 |
24,60 % |
Manuel Rojas Molina |
UDI |
37 241 |
33,59 % |
5[d] |
Lautaro Carmona Soto |
PCCh |
17 022 |
27,87 % |
Carlos Vilches Guzmán |
UDI |
13 159 |
21,55 % |
6[d] |
Giovanni Calderón Bassi |
UDI |
8330 |
19,26 % |
Alberto Robles Pantoja |
PRSD |
11 582 |
26,77 % |
7[d] |
Marcelo Díaz Díaz |
PS |
32 673 |
36,74 % |
Mario Bertolino Rendic |
RN |
18 037 |
20,28 % |
8[d] |
Matías Walker Prieto |
DC |
28 948 |
27,21 % |
Pedro Velásquez Seguel |
Ind. |
25 919 |
24,37 % |
9[d] |
Adriana Muñoz D'Albora |
PPD |
15 332 |
25,29 % |
Luis Lemus Aracena |
PRI |
15 735 |
25,95 % |
10[d] |
Eduardo Cerda García |
DC |
30 017 |
21,94 % |
Andrea Molina Oliva |
Ind-UDI |
36 000 |
26,31 % |
11[d] |
Gaspar Rivas Sánchez |
RN |
21 634 |
20,22 % |
Marco Antonio Núñez Lozano |
PPD |
49 801 |
46,55 % |
12[d] |
Arturo Squella Ovalle |
UDI |
30 108 |
24,75 % |
Marcelo Schilling Rodríguez |
PS |
24 124 |
19,83 % |
13[d] |
Aldo Cornejo Gonález |
DC |
40 582 |
31,04 % |
Joaquín Godoy Ibáñez |
RN |
38 183 |
29,20 % |
14[d] |
Rodrigo González Torres |
PPD |
41 168 |
25,89 % |
Edmundo Eluchans Urenda |
UDI |
45 829 |
28,82 % |
15[d] |
Víctor Torres Jeldes |
DC |
18 102 |
21,11 % |
María José Hoffmann Opazo |
UDI |
20 585 |
24,00 % |
16[d] |
Gabriel Silber Romo |
DC |
48 333 |
29,39 % |
Patricio Melero Abaroa |
UDI |
58 306 |
35,45 % |
17[d] |
Karla Rubilar Barahona |
RN |
46 572 |
33,15 % |
María Antonieta Saa Díaz |
PPD |
45 798 |
32,60 % |
18[d] |
Cristina Girardi Lavín |
PPD |
51 669 |
34,35 % |
Nicolás Monckeberg Díaz |
RN |
40 782 |
27,11 % |
19[d] |
Patricio Hales Dib |
PPD |
39 126 |
38,12 % |
Claudia Nogueira Fernández |
UDI |
38 297 |
37,31 % |
20[d] |
Pepe Auth Stewart |
PPD |
49 981 |
20,70 % |
Mónica Zalaquett Said |
UDI |
56 168 |
23,26 % |
21[d] |
Jorge Burgos Varela |
DC |
52 982 |
29,79 % |
Marcela Sabat Fernández |
RN |
48 732 |
27,40 % |
22[d] |
Felipe Harboe Bascuñán |
PPD |
42 060 |
38,66 % |
Alberto Cardemil Herrera |
RN |
38 949 |
35,80 % |
23[d] |
Ernesto Silva Méndez |
UDI |
60 272 |
27,95 % |
Cristián Monckeberg Bruner |
RN |
77 484 |
35,93 % |
24[d] |
Enrique Accorsi Opazo |
PPD |
31 383 |
23,19 % |
María Angélica Cristi Marfil |
UDI |
44 969 |
33,24 % |
25[d] |
Ximena Vidal Lázaro |
PPD |
43 794 |
30,81 % |
Felipe Salaberry Soto |
UDI |
28 444 |
20,01 % |
26[d] |
Carlos Montes Cisternas |
PS |
71 173 |
50,44 % |
Gustavo Hasbún Selume |
UDI |
36 438 |
25,82 % |
27[d] |
Tucapel Jiménez Fuentes |
PPD |
47 765 |
31,89 % |
Iván Moreira Barros |
UDI |
53 683 |
35,84 % |
28[d] |
Guillermo Teillier del Valle |
PCCh |
49 040 |
33,52 % |
Pedro Browne Urrejola |
RN |
31 882 |
21,79 % |
29[d] |
Osvaldo Andrade Lara |
PS |
55 152 |
29,88 % |
Leopoldo Pérez Lahsen |
RN |
45 464 |
24,63 % |
30[d] |
Ramón Farías Ponce |
PPD |
29 335 |
19,27 % |
José Antonio Kast Rist |
UDI |
53 423 |
35,10 % |
|
District | Deputy | Party | Votes | % |
31[d] |
Denise Pascal Allende |
PS |
52 763 |
32,23 % |
Gonzalo Uriarte Herrera |
UDI |
60 833 |
37,16 % |
32[d] |
Juan Luis Castro González |
PS |
27 772 |
30,76 % |
Alejandro García-Huidobro |
UDI |
31 346 |
34,71 % |
33[d] |
Ricardo Rincón González |
DC |
38 057 |
32,45 % |
Eugenio Bauer Jouanne |
UDI |
26 504 |
22,60 % |
34[d] |
Alejandra Sepúlveda Orbenes |
PRI |
42 771 |
45,55 % |
Javier Macaya Danús |
UDI |
17 130 |
18,24 % |
35[d] |
Juan Carlos Latorre Carmona |
DC |
30 300 |
38,83 % |
Ramón Barros Montero |
UDI |
29 622 |
37,96 % |
36[d] |
Roberto León Ramírez |
DC |
51 476 |
42,93 % |
Celso Morales Muñoz |
UDI |
35 732 |
29,80 % |
37[d] |
Sergio Aguiló Melo |
PS |
31 649 |
37,69 % |
Germán Verdugo Soto |
RN |
32 864 |
39,14 % |
38[d] |
Pablo Lorenzini Basso |
DC |
29 320 |
38,32 % |
Pedro Pablo Álvarez-Salamanca Ramírez |
Ind-UDI |
15 844 |
20,71 % |
39[d] |
Jorge Tarud Daccarett |
PPD |
38 626 |
46,26 % |
Romilio Gutiérrez Pino |
UDI |
22 487 |
26,93 % |
40[d] |
Guillermo Ceroni Fuentes |
PPD |
32 643 |
44,75 % |
Ignacio Urrutia Bonilla |
UDI |
19 323 |
26,49 % |
41[d] |
Carlos Abel Jarpa Wevar |
PRSD |
24 093 |
19,12 % |
Rosauro Martínez Labbé |
RN |
42 385 |
33,64 % |
42[d] |
Jorge Sabag Villalobos |
DC |
32 174 |
28,59 % |
Frank Sauerbaum Muñoz |
RN |
22 861 |
20,33 % |
43[d] |
Cristián Campos Jara |
PPD |
33 622 |
31,35 % |
Jorge Ulloa Aguillón |
UDI |
30 309 |
28,26 % |
44[d] |
José Miguel Ortiz Novoa |
DC |
45 379 |
27,04 % |
Enrique van Rysselberghe Herrera |
UDI |
44 735 |
26,65 % |
45[d] |
Clemira Pacheco Rivas |
PS |
38 379 |
33,80 % |
Sergio Bobadilla Muñoz |
UDI |
29 272 |
25,78 % |
46[d] |
Iván Norambuena Farías |
UDI |
34 852 |
35,77 % |
Manuel Monsalve Benavides |
PS |
30 360 |
31,16 % |
47[d] |
José Pérez Arriagada |
PRSD |
46 606 |
33,80 % |
Juan Lobos Krause |
UDI |
51 937 |
37,67 % |
48[d] |
Mario Venegas Cárdenas |
DC |
20 102 |
29,80 % |
Gonzalo Arenas Hodar |
UDI |
17 223 |
25,54 % |
49[d] |
Fuad Chahín Valenzuela |
DC |
20 212 |
30,26 % |
Enrique Estay Peñaloza |
UDI |
16 009 |
23,97 % |
50[d] |
René Saffirio Espinoza |
DC |
37 017 |
30,83 % |
Germán Becker Alvear |
RN |
33 785 |
28,14 % |
51[d] |
Joaquín Tuma Zedán |
PPD |
16 327 |
24,36 % |
José Manuel Edwards Silva |
RN |
11 275 |
16,82 % |
52[d] |
Fernando Meza Moncada |
PRSD |
22 116 |
32,72 % |
René Manuel García García |
RN |
20 726 |
30,66 % |
53[d] |
Alfonso de Urresti Longton |
PS |
32 433 |
38,71 % |
Roberto Delmastro Naso |
RN |
25 360 |
30,27 % |
54[d] |
Enrique Jaramillo Becker |
PPD |
29 004 |
37,43 % |
Gastón von Mühlenbrock Zamora |
UDI |
19 978 |
25,78 % |
55[d] |
Sergio Ojeda Uribe |
DC |
23 623 |
30,44 % |
Javier Hernández Hernández |
UDI |
22 108 |
28,49 % |
56[d] |
Fidel Espinoza Sandoval |
PS |
39 245 |
51,30 % |
Carlos Rencodo Lavanderos |
UDI |
18 792 |
24,57 % |
57[d] |
Patricio Vallespín López |
DC |
33 782 |
38,60 % |
Marisol Turres Figueroa |
UDI |
28 552 |
32,62 % |
58[d] |
Gabriel Ascencio Mansilla |
DC |
17 457 |
23,10 % |
Alejandro Santana Tirachini |
RN |
27 098 |
35,86 % |
59[d] |
René Alinco Bustos |
PPD |
9381 |
22,90 % |
David Sandoval Plaza |
UDI |
12 902 |
31,50 % |
60[d] |
Carolina Goic Boroevic |
DC |
22 498 |
34,00 % |
Miodrag Marinovic Solo De Zaldívar |
Ind. |
17 512 |
26,47 % |
|
Chilean Senate elections
↓
17 |
1 |
19 |
1 |
Coalition for Change |
Ind |
Concert & Together We Can |
' |
↓
8 |
8 |
1 |
1 |
9 |
1 |
4 |
5 |
1 |
UDI |
RN |
' |
Ind |
PDC |
' |
PPD |
PS |
' |
Includes results from 9,793 out of 9,934 ballot boxes (98.58%). (Source: Interior Ministry.)
List |
Parties |
Candidates |
Elected (2009) |
Old seats (2005) |
Total seats |
% of Seats |
Net Change in seats |
% of Votes |
Number of Votes |
|
Concert & Together We Can for more democracy |
Total List A | 18 | 9 | 10 | 19 | 50.0 | -1 | 43.3 | 820,147 |
|
Christian Democratic |
8 | 4 | 5 | 9 | 23.7 | +3 | 16.6 | 314,145 |
|
PPD |
4 | 3 | 1 | 4 | 10.5 | +1 | 13.8 | 262,503 |
|
Socialist |
4 | 2 | 3 | 5 | 13.2 | -3 | 9.2 | 175,017 |
|
Social Democratic Radical |
2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 2.6 | -2 | 3.6 | 68,482 |
|
Coalition for Change |
Total List B | 17 | 9 | 7 | 16 | 42.1 | -1 | 45.2 | 856,593 |
|
National Renewal | 8 | 6 | 2 | 8 | 21.0 | | 20.2 | 382,728 |
|
UDI | 7 | 3 | 5 | 8 | 21.0 | -1 | 21.3 | 403,741 |
Independents List B | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.0 | | 3.7 | 70,124 |
|
Clean Chile, Vote Happy |
Total List D | 10 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 2.6 | -1 | 6.4 | 122,041 |
|
Regionalist | 6 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.0 | -1 | 2.4 | 46,730 |
|
MAS | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 2.6 | | Did not contest |
Independents List D | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.0 | | 4.0 | 75,311 |
|
New Majority for Chile |
Total List C | 7 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.0 | | 4.9 | 92,240 |
|
Humanist | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.0 | | 0.7 | 12,974 |
Independents List C | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.0 | | 4.2 | 79,266 |
E |
Independents out of pact | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 2.6 | | 0.2 | 4,461 |
Tarapacá-Arica and Parinacota
Atacama
Valparaiso East
Candidate |
Pact |
Party |
Votes |
% |
Result |
Ignacio Walker |
Concert & Together we can for more democracy |
PDC |
76 716 |
21,07 |
Senator |
Nelson Ávila |
Concert & Together we can for more democracy |
PRSD |
64 124 |
17,61 |
|
Marcelo Forni |
Coalition for Change |
UDI |
71 645 |
19,68 |
|
Lily Pérez |
Coalition for Change |
RN |
83 595 |
22,96 |
Senator |
Carlos Ominami |
New Majority for Chile |
Indep. |
60 945 |
16,74 |
|
Cristián García-Huidobro |
New Majority for Chile |
Indep. |
2509 |
0,68 |
|
Lautaro Velásquez |
Clean Chile, Vote Happy |
Indep. |
4422 |
1,21 |
|
Valparaíso West
Maule North
Maule South
Araucanía North
Candidate |
Pact |
Party |
Votes |
% |
Result |
Jaime Quintana |
Concert & Together we can, for more democracy |
PPD |
40.120 |
29,66 |
Senator |
Tomás Jocelyn-Holt |
Concert & Together we can, for more democracy |
PDC |
7.481 |
5,53 |
|
Alberto Espina |
Coalition for Change |
RN |
52.082 |
38,51 |
Senator |
Cecilia Villouta |
Coalition for Change |
Independent |
7.255 |
5,36 |
|
Juan Enrique Prieto |
New Majority for Chile |
PH |
1.611 |
1,19 |
|
Roberto Muñoz |
Clean Chile, Vote Happy |
Independent |
20.126 |
14,88 |
|
Enrique Sanhueza |
Clean Chile, Vote Happy |
Independent |
6.574 |
4,86 |
|
Source[8] |
Araucanía South
Candidate |
Pact |
Party |
Votes |
% |
Result |
Eugenio Tuma Zedan |
Concert & Together we can for more democracy |
PPD |
74.207 |
29,08 |
Senator |
José García Ruminot |
Coalition for Change |
RN |
57.260 |
22,44 |
Senator |
Ena von Baer |
Coalition for Change |
UDI |
56.578 |
22,17 |
|
Francisco Huenchumilla |
Concert & Together we can for more democracy |
DC |
51.338 |
20,12 |
|
Eduardo Díaz |
Clean Chile, Vote Happy |
PRI |
11.464 |
4,49 |
|
Luis Fernando Vivanco |
New Majority for Chile |
PH |
2.779 |
1,08 |
|
José Villagrán |
Clean Chile, Vote Happy |
Independent |
1.512 |
0,59 |
|
Source[9] |
Aysen
Candidate |
Pact |
Party |
Votes |
% |
Result |
Antonio Horvath |
Coalition for Change |
RN |
14.193 |
34,61 |
Senator |
Patricio Walker |
Concert & Together we can for more democracy |
PDC |
11.293 |
27,54 |
Senator |
Eduardo Cruces |
Clean Chile, Vote Happy |
PRI |
6.958 |
16,97 |
|
Paz Foitzich |
Clean Chile, Vote Happy |
PRI |
4.613 |
11,25 |
|
Ernesto Velasco |
Concert & Together we can for more democracy |
PRSD |
3.940 |
9,61 |
|
Source[10] |
References
- ↑ Cronograma Electoral, Servel
- ↑ Infinita, Schaulsohn se Asume Piñerista
- ↑ La Nación, Valenzuela dejó Chile Primero por apoyo a Piñera
- ↑ http://www.regionalistas.cl/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=30&Itemid=28 Acuerdo entre el el PH, PE, el Movimiento Regionalista, Progresistas en Red y el MUMS
- ↑ http://www.mums.cl/sitio/contenidos/noticias/not_2009_09_14_01.htm Mums inscribe candidatos por la diversidad sexual al Parlamento
- ↑ http://www.tomashirsch.cl/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=216:fuerzas-progresistas-alternativas-y-de-izquierda-acuerdan-lista-parlamentaria-que-busca-aglutinar-nueva-mayoria-&catid=9:noticias Acuerdan lista parlamentaria para aglutinar nueva mayoría
- ↑ Tricel via Interior Ministry.
- ↑ "Votación Candidatos por Circunscripción 14". Sitio histórico electoral. Retrieved 27 July 2011.
- ↑ Elecciones.gov.cl Votación candidatos por Cicunscripción 15, La Araucanía Sur, senadores 2009
- ↑ Elecciones.gov.cl Votación candidatos por Cicunscripción 18, Aysén, senadores 2009
External links