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Discuciones generales / Energy in the form of cold and heat
« on: September 05, 2023, 08:18:49 am »
Although reasonable and welcome, this management modality is not without risks, particularly when the voices of the government have begun to sound like an out-of-tune and disorderly chorus of characters bidding to be heard and have a presence in the media and social networks. But the difficulties the government is already facing are not merely attributable to the presidential leadership, its cast or its political base. In reality, they reflect systemic keys.
The traditional party system not only became illegitimate for the Phone Number List of the Chilean population, Rather, it lost the ability to institutionally structure and channel central social conflicts that were deprived of political representation. With the outbreak of 2019, these latent and long-standing conflicts, both sectoral and territorial, burst stridently onto the national stage. However, the "outburst" can only be represented in its desire to dismiss (from the traditional political class) and in the denial of the institutional pillars of the pre-existing order.

Beyond both tropisms, there is (yet?) in the emerging elites the ability to synthesize or articulate discontent in a more constructive key. The future of the Constitutional Convention clearly reflects the impossibility of structuring the conflict in Chile today. Installed with unprecedented levels of social legitimacy in the post-dictatorial period, the Convention has been trapped by its own legitimacy, seeking to affirm and reaffirm it, through gestures and identity turns that increasingly generate less support in public opinion.
The traditional party system not only became illegitimate for the Phone Number List of the Chilean population, Rather, it lost the ability to institutionally structure and channel central social conflicts that were deprived of political representation. With the outbreak of 2019, these latent and long-standing conflicts, both sectoral and territorial, burst stridently onto the national stage. However, the "outburst" can only be represented in its desire to dismiss (from the traditional political class) and in the denial of the institutional pillars of the pre-existing order.

Beyond both tropisms, there is (yet?) in the emerging elites the ability to synthesize or articulate discontent in a more constructive key. The future of the Constitutional Convention clearly reflects the impossibility of structuring the conflict in Chile today. Installed with unprecedented levels of social legitimacy in the post-dictatorial period, the Convention has been trapped by its own legitimacy, seeking to affirm and reaffirm it, through gestures and identity turns that increasingly generate less support in public opinion.