
Chile’s Kast Suspends Dozens of Environmental Decrees
Chilean measures on emissions, national park creation, and protecting endangered amphibians have been frozen in pursuit of economic growth.

Chilean measures on emissions, national park creation, and protecting endangered amphibians have been frozen in pursuit of economic growth.

Official data show that Chile is home to 337,000 illegal immigrants

Hungary has faced challenges that resonate with current concerns in Chile: public security, migration control, social cohesion, and the tension between national sovereignty and supranational dynamics.

Chilean president José Antonio Kast’s address crystallized the political and moral message of the summit against the global progressive consensus.

Delegates from more than 35 countries and members of three major right-wing European parliamentary groups—the ECR, the PfE, and the EPP—are set to attend.

After years of state expansion, weakened public order, and institutional fragmentation, the new government aims to restore authority and sovereignty while promoting moral conservatism and protecting private property.

Kast’s victory caps a campaign focused on public security and migration, reinforcing a broader rightward shift across Latin America.

Chile’s immigrant population has grown exponentially in recent years—the prospective next president proposes a dramatic solution.