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Bachelet returns to power in Chile pledging greater equality

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Socialist Michelle Bachelet promised to tackle inequality as she took the oath of office, returning to power after four years to lead this prosperous South American country once more.

"Chile has but one great enemy, and its name is inequality. Only together can we take it on," the president said.

"Let's start now. The time is short," she stressed, pledging 50 initiatives in her first 100 days back in office.

The 62-year-old was sworn in at a solemn ceremony in Congress charged with symbolism.

"Yes, I promise," she said as she took the oath from the new Senate leader Isabel Allende.

Allende, the daughter of ousted president Salvador Allende who died in a 1973 coup, handed Bachelet the presidential sash and fervently embraced the returning president.

The new Chilean President Michelle Bachelet waves during an inauguration parade in Santiago  Chile  ...
The new Chilean President Michelle Bachelet waves during an inauguration parade in Santiago, Chile, on March 11, 2014
Martin Bernetti, AFP

"The historic image of two women simultaneously occupying the two highest positions of state will go around the world," Allende said earlier.

Gathered for the transfer of power were presidents from around the region as well as US Vice President Joe Biden. He met with Bachelet on Monday.

Notably absent was Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro, who cancelled at the last minute.

Five weeks of unrest in Venezuela, which have left at least 21 dead, including a Chilean woman, were to be taken up Wednesday here at a meeting of South American foreign ministers.

Bachelet succeeds Sebastian Pinera, who said he was leaving his successor "a better country than the one we had four years ago."

Pinera, barred from running for a second consecutive term, is leaving office at the peak of his popularity -- around 50 percent.

- Promises of change -

Bachelet was Chile's first female president the first time she held the office, from 2006 to 2010.

In this second stint at the helm, she will have a chance to cement her legacy as a transformative leader who experienced firsthand the horrors of the 1973-1990 Augusto Pinochet military dictatorship.

Chilean President Michelle Bachelet (L) is greeted by outgoing President Sebastian Pinera during her...
Chilean President Michelle Bachelet (L) is greeted by outgoing President Sebastian Pinera during her inauguration ceremony in Valparaiso, Chile, on March 11, 2014
Martin Bernetti, AFP

During that dark period, Bachelet was tortured, fled the country, and then returned years later to work as a pediatrician, eventually entering politics.

Her father died after being tortured for remaining loyal to leftist president Allende in the 1973 coup that saw Pinochet come to power.

She returned to Chile last year after three years in New York, where she headed UN Women, and defeated conservative Evelyn Matthei in December elections with 62 percent of the vote.

During the intense campaign, she promised to launch major reforms of Chile's education system, its taxes and write a new constitution that wipes away vestiges of the Pinochet dictatorship.

She promised free university-level education and to end state subsidies to private, for-profit colleges, which have put higher education out of reach of the poor.

Both reforms were at the center of mass student protests that swept Santiago starting in 2011.

Student leaders have remained skeptical, however, and say the protests will continue.

To finance the educational system, Bachelet has called for an ambitious tax reform that would raise $8.2 billion, or about three percent of GDP.

The new constitution Bachelet envisions would replace one imposed by the military in 1980, and revise the length and limits on presidential terms.

- Support in Congress -

In Congress, she has the majority needed to approve the tax reform, but still must form alliances with the opposition and independents to pass the educational reform and to rewrite the constitution.

Argentine President Cristina Kirchner waves to the press in Vina Del Mar  Chile on March 11  2014 af...
Argentine President Cristina Kirchner waves to the press in Vina Del Mar, Chile on March 11, 2014 after Chilean President Michelle Bachelet's inauguration
Claudio Reyes, AFP

Analysts believe she can easily find the votes for education reform, but say overcoming hurdles to changing the constitution will be much tougher.

Internally, Bachelet also must deal with political differences that are already evident in the broad coalition of Christian Democrats, Socialists and Communists who support her.

The crisis in Venezuela has already confronted her with divisions between Christian Democrats, who want to censure the Maduro government, and the communists, who support him.

Bachelet is inheriting an economy that is losing steam after some five years at a five percent growth rate. Growth next year is forecast at between 3.75 and 4.75 percent.

One of her first challenges, therefore, will be to dampen the soaring expectations for quick changes, with Asian demands for Chile's copper on the wane.

Socialist Michelle Bachelet promised to tackle inequality as she took the oath of office, returning to power after four years to lead this prosperous South American country once more.

“Chile has but one great enemy, and its name is inequality. Only together can we take it on,” the president said.

“Let’s start now. The time is short,” she stressed, pledging 50 initiatives in her first 100 days back in office.

The 62-year-old was sworn in at a solemn ceremony in Congress charged with symbolism.

“Yes, I promise,” she said as she took the oath from the new Senate leader Isabel Allende.

Allende, the daughter of ousted president Salvador Allende who died in a 1973 coup, handed Bachelet the presidential sash and fervently embraced the returning president.

The new Chilean President Michelle Bachelet waves during an inauguration parade in Santiago  Chile  ...

The new Chilean President Michelle Bachelet waves during an inauguration parade in Santiago, Chile, on March 11, 2014
Martin Bernetti, AFP

“The historic image of two women simultaneously occupying the two highest positions of state will go around the world,” Allende said earlier.

Gathered for the transfer of power were presidents from around the region as well as US Vice President Joe Biden. He met with Bachelet on Monday.

Notably absent was Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro, who cancelled at the last minute.

Five weeks of unrest in Venezuela, which have left at least 21 dead, including a Chilean woman, were to be taken up Wednesday here at a meeting of South American foreign ministers.

Bachelet succeeds Sebastian Pinera, who said he was leaving his successor “a better country than the one we had four years ago.”

Pinera, barred from running for a second consecutive term, is leaving office at the peak of his popularity — around 50 percent.

– Promises of change –

Bachelet was Chile’s first female president the first time she held the office, from 2006 to 2010.

In this second stint at the helm, she will have a chance to cement her legacy as a transformative leader who experienced firsthand the horrors of the 1973-1990 Augusto Pinochet military dictatorship.

Chilean President Michelle Bachelet (L) is greeted by outgoing President Sebastian Pinera during her...

Chilean President Michelle Bachelet (L) is greeted by outgoing President Sebastian Pinera during her inauguration ceremony in Valparaiso, Chile, on March 11, 2014
Martin Bernetti, AFP

During that dark period, Bachelet was tortured, fled the country, and then returned years later to work as a pediatrician, eventually entering politics.

Her father died after being tortured for remaining loyal to leftist president Allende in the 1973 coup that saw Pinochet come to power.

She returned to Chile last year after three years in New York, where she headed UN Women, and defeated conservative Evelyn Matthei in December elections with 62 percent of the vote.

During the intense campaign, she promised to launch major reforms of Chile’s education system, its taxes and write a new constitution that wipes away vestiges of the Pinochet dictatorship.

She promised free university-level education and to end state subsidies to private, for-profit colleges, which have put higher education out of reach of the poor.

Both reforms were at the center of mass student protests that swept Santiago starting in 2011.

Student leaders have remained skeptical, however, and say the protests will continue.

To finance the educational system, Bachelet has called for an ambitious tax reform that would raise $8.2 billion, or about three percent of GDP.

The new constitution Bachelet envisions would replace one imposed by the military in 1980, and revise the length and limits on presidential terms.

– Support in Congress –

In Congress, she has the majority needed to approve the tax reform, but still must form alliances with the opposition and independents to pass the educational reform and to rewrite the constitution.

Argentine President Cristina Kirchner waves to the press in Vina Del Mar  Chile on March 11  2014 af...

Argentine President Cristina Kirchner waves to the press in Vina Del Mar, Chile on March 11, 2014 after Chilean President Michelle Bachelet's inauguration
Claudio Reyes, AFP

Analysts believe she can easily find the votes for education reform, but say overcoming hurdles to changing the constitution will be much tougher.

Internally, Bachelet also must deal with political differences that are already evident in the broad coalition of Christian Democrats, Socialists and Communists who support her.

The crisis in Venezuela has already confronted her with divisions between Christian Democrats, who want to censure the Maduro government, and the communists, who support him.

Bachelet is inheriting an economy that is losing steam after some five years at a five percent growth rate. Growth next year is forecast at between 3.75 and 4.75 percent.

One of her first challenges, therefore, will be to dampen the soaring expectations for quick changes, with Asian demands for Chile’s copper on the wane.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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